npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

@luke-john/react-docgen-typescript-loader

v3.10.0

Published

Webpack loader to generate docgen information from TypeScript React components.

Downloads

10

Readme

Guide

Changelog

View Changelog.

Migrating from V2 to V3

Version 2 supported the options includes and excludes, which were arrays of regular expressions. If you made use of these options, remove them from and use the Webpack equivalents.

includes would default to ["\\.tsx$"] which meant that only files ending in the extension .ts or .tsx would be processed. This default behavior is already covered by Webpack's test field.

excludes would default to ["node_modules"]. This would prevent the processing of files in node_modules. This option was added to allow further filtering to hopefully speed up processing. When this loader is used in monorepo environments, this option would complicate configuration.

In version 3, the loader no longer performs its own filtering. If you relied on the additional filtering behavior, you should be able to reimplement it using options in Webpack.

This change shouldn't affect the majority of projects.

Quick Start

Requirements

The source code generation relies on being able to insert // @ts-ignore in a few select places and as such requires TypeScript 2.3 or above.

Package Installation

$ npm install --save-dev react-docgen-typescript-loader

or

$ yarn add --dev react-docgen-typescript-loader

Webpack Configuration

IMPORTANT: Webpack loaders are executed right-to-left (or bottom-to-top). react-docgen-typescript-loader needs to be added under ts-loader.

Example Storybook config /.storybook/webpack.config.js:

Storybook 4

const path = require("path");

module.exports = (baseConfig, env, config) => {
  config.module.rules.push({
    test: /\.tsx?$/,
    include: path.resolve(__dirname, "../src"),
    use: [
      require.resolve("ts-loader"),
      {
        loader: require.resolve("react-docgen-typescript-loader"),
        options: {
          // Provide the path to your tsconfig.json so that your stories can
          // display types from outside each individual story.
          tsconfigPath: path.resolve(__dirname, "../tsconfig.json"),
        },
      },
    ],
  });

  config.resolve.extensions.push(".ts", ".tsx");

  return config;
};

Storybook 3

const path = require("path");
const genDefaultConfig = require("@storybook/react/dist/server/config/defaults/webpack.config.js");

module.exports = (baseConfig, env) => {
  const config = genDefaultConfig(baseConfig);

  config.module.rules.push({
    test: /\.tsx?$/,
    include: path.resolve(__dirname, "../src"),
    use: [
      require.resolve("ts-loader"),
      {
        loader: require.resolve("react-docgen-typescript-loader"),
        options: {
          // Provide the path to your tsconfig.json so that your stories can
          // display types from outside each individual story.
          tsconfigPath: path.resolve(__dirname, "../tsconfig.json"),
        },
      },
    ],
  });

  config.resolve.extensions.push(".ts", ".tsx");

  return config;
};

Documenting Components with Storybook

Include the withInfo decorator as normal. Reference the addon documentation for the latest usage instructions: https://github.com/storybooks/storybook/tree/master/addons/info

Including Component Description

The Storybook Info Addon is able to populate the component description from your component's documentation. It does this when your story name matches the display name of your component. The prop tables will populate in either case.

Example image, how to include component description

In the first example you are able to see above Story Source the component description. The second example shows a story with a name different from the component. In the second example the component description is missing.

If you have a component named TicTacToeCell, then you would have to use something like: storiesOf("...", module).add("TicTacToeCell", ...) to have the story description come from the component description.

In addition to the description from the component, you may still include story description text using the normal withInfo api.

Exporting Components

It is important to export your component using a named export for docgen information to be generated properly.


TicTacToeCell.tsx:

import React, { Component } from "react";
import * as styles from "./TicTacToeCell.css";

interface Props {
  /**
   * Value to display, either empty (" ") or "X" / "O".
   *
   * @default " "
   **/
  value?: " " | "X" | "O";

  /** Cell position on game board. */
  position: { x: number, y: number };

  /** Called when an empty cell is clicked. */
  onClick?: (x: number, y: number) => void;
}

/**
 * TicTacToe game cell. Displays a clickable button when the value is " ",
 * otherwise displays "X" or "O".
 */
// Notice the named export here, this is required for docgen information
// to be generated correctly.
export class TicTacToeCell extends Component<Props> {
  handleClick = () => {
    const {
      position: { x, y },
      onClick,
    } = this.props;
    if (!onClick) return;

    onClick(x, y);
  };

  render() {
    const { value = " " } = this.props;
    const disabled = value !== " ";
    const classes = `${styles.button} ${disabled ? styles.disabled : ""}`;

    return (
      <button
        className={classes}
        disabled={disabled}
        onClick={this.handleClick}
      >
        {value}
      </button>
    );
  }
}

// Component can still be exported as default.
export default TicTacToeCell;

ColorButton.stories.tsx:

import React from "react";
import { storiesOf } from "@storybook/react";
import { withInfo } from "@storybook/addon-info";
import { action } from "@storybook/addon-actions";
import TicTacToeCell from "./TicTacToeCell";

const stories = storiesOf("Components", module);

stories.add(
  "TicTacToeCell",
  withInfo({ inline: true })(() => (
    <TicTacToeCell
      value="X"
      position={{ x: 0, y: 0 }}
      onClick={action("onClick")}
    />
  )),
);

Loader Options

| Option | Type | Description | | ---------------------------------- | -------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | skipPropsWithName | string[] or string | Avoid including docgen information for the prop or props specified. | | skipPropsWithoutDoc | boolean | Avoid including docgen information for props without documentation. | | componentNameResolver | function | If a string is returned, then the component will use that name. Else it will fallback to the default logic of parser. https://github.com/styleguidist/react-docgen-typescript#parseroptions | | propFilter | function | Filter props using a function. If skipPropsWithName or skipPropsWithoutDoc is defined the function will not be used. Function accepts two arguments: object with information about prop and an object with information about component. Return true to include prop in documentation. https://github.com/styleguidist/react-docgen-typescript#parseroptions | | tsconfigPath | string | Specify the location of the tsconfig.json to use. Can not be used with compilerOptions. | | compilerOptions | typescript.CompilerOptions | Specify TypeScript compiler options. Can not be used with tsconfigPath. | | docgenCollectionName | string or null | Specify the docgen collection name to use. All docgen information will be collected into this global object. Set to null to disable. Defaults to STORYBOOK_REACT_CLASSES for use with the Storybook Info Addon. https://github.com/gongreg/react-storybook-addon-docgen | | setDisplayName | boolean | Automatically set the components' display name. If you want to set display names yourself or are using another plugin to do this, you should disable this option. Defaults to true. This is used to preserve component display names during a production build of Storybook. | | shouldExtractLiteralValuesFromEnum | boolean | If set to true, string enums and unions will be converted to docgen enum format. Useful if you use Storybook and want to generate knobs automatically using addon-smart-knobs. https://github.com/styleguidist/react-docgen-typescript#parseroptions | | savePropValueAsString | boolean | If set to true, defaultValue to props will be string. https://github.com/styleguidist/react-docgen-typescript#parseroptions | | typePropName | string | Specify the name of the property for docgen info prop type. | | shouldRemoveUndefinedFromOptional | boolean | If set to true, types that are optional will not display | undefined in the type. https://github.com/styleguidist/react-docgen-typescript#parseroptions |

Performance

There is a significant startup cost due to the initial type parsing. Once the project is running in watch mode, things should be smoother due to Webpack caching.

Alternative Implementation

This plugin uses a Webpack loader to inject the docgen information. There is also a version which works as a Webpack plugin. I will be supporting both versions. The loader version more accurately generates the injected code blocks and should work with all module types but at the cost of a longer initial startup. The plugin version may be faster.

The Webpack plugin version is available here: https://github.com/strothj/react-docgen-typescript-loader/tree/plugin

Limitations

This plugin makes use of the project: https://github.com/styleguidist/react-docgen-typescript. It is subject to the same limitations.

React Component Class Import

When extending from React.Component as opposed to Component, docgens don't seem to be created. Ref issue #10 (thanks @StevenLangbroek for tracking down the cause).

Doesn't work:

import React from 'react';

interface IProps {
  whatever?: string;
};

export default class MyComponent extends React.Component<IProps> {}

Works:

import React, { Component } from 'react';

export default class MyComponent extends Component<IProps> {}

Export Names

Component docgen information can not be generated for components that are only exported as default. You can work around the issue by exporting the component using a named export.

import * as React from "react";

interface ColorButtonProps {
  /** Buttons background color */
  color: "blue" | "green";
}

/** A button with a configurable background color. */
export const ColorButton: React.SFC<ColorButtonProps> = props => (
  <button
    style={{
      padding: 40,
      color: "#eee",
      backgroundColor: props.color,
      fontSize: "2rem",
    }}
  >
    {props.children}
  </button>
);

export default ColorButton;

Contributing

Pull requests are welcome. For major changes, please open an issue first to discuss what you would like to change.

Please make sure to update tests as appropriate.

Credits

SVG Logos

  • https://prettier.io
  • https://seeklogo.com

Projects

License

MIT