Package Exports
- coffee-react-transform
- coffee-react-transform/package.json
This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (coffee-react-transform) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
Coffeescript React JSX Transformer
Provides support for an equivalent of JSX syntax in Coffeescript (called CJSX) so you can write your Facebook React components with the full awesomeness of Coffeescript.
Example
car-component.coffee
# @cjsx React.DOM
Car = React.createClass
render: ->
<Vehicle doors={4} locked={isLocked()} data-colour="red" on>
<Parts.FrontSeat />
<Parts.BackSeat />
<p className="kickin">Which seat can I take? {@props?.seat or 'none'}</p>
</Vehicle>transform
cjsx-transform car-component.coffeeoutput
Car = React.createClass
render: ->
Vehicle({"doors": (4), "locked": (isLocked()), "data-colour": "red", "on": true},
Parts.FrontSeat(null),
Parts.BackSeat(null),
React.DOM.p({className: "kickin"}, "Which seat can I take? ", (@props?.seat or 'none'))
)Try it out
The try coffee-react tool is available to test out some CJSX code and see the CoffeeScript it transforms into.
Getting Started
coffee-react-transform simply handles preprocessing Coffeescript with JSX-style markup into valid Coffeescript. Instead of using it directly, you may want to make use of one of these more high-level tools:
- coffee-react: a drop-in replacement for the
coffeeexecutable, for compiling CJSX. - node-cjsx:
requireCJSX files on the server (also possible with coffee-react/register). - coffee-reactify: bundle CJSX files via browserify, see also cjsxify.
- react-coffee-quickstart: equivalent to react-quickstart.
- sprockets preprocessor: use CJSX with Rails/Sprockets
- ruby coffee-react gem for general ruby integration
- vim plugin for syntax highlighting
- sublime text package for syntax highlighting
- mimosa plugin for the mimosa build tool
- karma preprocessor for karma test runner
CLI
cjsx-transform [input file]Outputs Coffeescript code to stdout. Redirect it to a file or straight to the Coffeescript compiler, eg.
cjsx-transform examples/car.coffee | coffee -cs > car.jsAPI
transform = require 'coffee-react-transform'
transformed = transform('...some CJSX code...')Installation
From npm:
npm install -g coffee-react-transformUMD bundle for the browser
If you want to use coffee-react-transform in the browser or under ExecJS or some other environment that doesn't support CommonJS modules, you can use this build provided by BrowserifyCDN, which will work as an AMD module or just a plain old script tag:
http://wzrd.in/standalone/coffee-react-transform
<script src="http://wzrd.in/standalone/coffee-react-transform"></script>
<script>
coffeeReactTransform('-> <a />');
// returns "-> React.DOM.a(null)"
</script>Spread attributes
A recent addition to JSX (and CJSX) is 'spread attributes' which allow merging an object of props into a component, eg:
extraProps = color: 'red', speed: 'fast'
<div color="blue" {... extraProps} />which is transformed to:
extraProps = color: 'red', speed: 'fast'
React.DOM.div(Object.assign({"color": "blue"}, extraProps)If you use this syntax in your code, be sure to include a shim for Object.assign for browsers/environments which don't yet support it (basically all of them).
es6-shim and object.assign are two possible choices.
Tests
cake test or cake watch:test
Note about the .cjsx file extension
The custom file extension recently changed from .csx to .cjsx to avoid conflicting with an existing C# related file extension, so be sure to update your files accordingly (including changing the pragma to @cjsx). You can also just use .coffee as the file extension. Backwards compatibility will be maintained until the next major version.