JSPM

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  • License MIT

A lightweight library that converts raw HTML to a React DOM structure.

Package Exports

  • html-to-react

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 (html-to-react) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

html-to-react Build Status npm version Dependency Status Coverage Status

A lightweight library that converts raw HTML to a React DOM structure.

Why?

I had a scenario where an HTML template was generated by a different team, yet I wanted to leverage React for the parts I did have control over. The template basically contains something like:

<div class="row">
    <div class="col-sm-6">
        <div data-report-id="report-1">
          <!-- A React component for report-1 -->
        </div>
    </div>
    <div class="col-sm-6">
        <div data-report-id="report-2">
          <!-- A React component for report-2 -->
        </div>
    </div>
</div>

I had to replace each <div> that contains a data-report-id attribute with an actual report, which was nothing more than a React component.

Simply replacing the <div> elements with a React component would end up with multiple top-level React components that have no common parent.

The html-to-react module solves this problem by parsing each DOM element and converting it to a React tree with one single parent.

Installation

$ npm install --save html-to-react

Examples

Simple

The following example parses each node and its attributes and returns a tree of React components.

var React = require('react');
var HtmlToReact = new require('html-to-react');

var htmlInput = '<div><h1>Title</h1><p>A paragraph</p></div>';
var htmlToReactParser = new HtmlToReact.Parser(React);
var reactComponent = htmlToReactParser.parse(htmlInput);
var reactHtml = React.renderToStaticMarkup(reactComponent);

assert.equal(reactHtml, htmlInput); // true

With custom processing instructions

If certain DOM nodes require specific processing, for example if you want to capitalize each <h1> tag, the following example demonstrates this:

var React = require('react');
var HtmlToReact = new require('html-to-react');

var htmlInput = '<div><h1>Title</h1><p>Paragraph</p><h1>Another title</h1></div>';
var htmlExpected = '<div><h1>TITLE</h1><p>Paragraph</p><h1>ANOTHER TITLE</h1></div>';

var isValidNode = function() {
    return true;
};

// Order matters. Instructions are processed in the order they're defined
var processNodeDefinitions = new HtmlToReact.ProcessNodeDefinitions(React);
var processingInstructions = [
    {
        // Custom <h1> processing
        shouldProcessNode: function(node) {
            return node.parent && node.parent.name && node.parent.name === 'h1';
        },
        processNode: function(node, children) {
            return node.data.toUpperCase();
        }
    }, {
        // Anything else
        shouldProcessNode: function(node) {
            return true;
        },
        processNode: processNodeDefinitions.processDefaultNode
    }];
var htmlToReactParser = new HtmlToReact.Parser(React);
var reactComponent = htmlToReactParser.parseWithInstructions(htmlInput, isValidNode, processingInstructions);
var reactHtml = React.renderToStaticMarkup(reactComponent);
assert.equal(reactHtml, htmlExpected);

Tests & Coverage

$ npm run test-locally

$ npm run test-html-coverage