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@mobylogix/react-trello

v1.2.1

Published

Pluggable components to add a trello like kanban board to your application

Downloads

35

Readme

react-trello

Pluggable components to add a trello like kanban board to your application

Build Status npm version

Features

alt tag

  • responsive and extensible
  • easily pluggable into existing application
  • supports pagination when scrolling individual lanes
  • drag-and-drop within and across lanes (compatible with touch devices)
  • event bus for triggering events externally (e.g.: adding or removing cards based on events coming from backend)

Getting Started

npm install --save react-trello

Usage

The Board component takes a prop called data that contains all the details related to rendering the board. A sample data json is given here to illustrate the contract:

const data = {
  lanes: [
    {
      id: 'lane1',
      title: 'Planned Tasks',
      label: '2/2',
      cards: [
        {_id: 'Card1', title: 'Write Blog', description: 'Can AI make memes', label: '30 mins'},
	      {_id: 'Card2', title: 'Pay Rent', description: 'Transfer via NEFT', label: '5 mins', metadata: {sha: 'be312a1'}}
      ]
    },
    {
      id: 'lane2',
      title: 'Completed',
      label: '0/0',
      cards: []
    }
  ]
}

The data is fed to the board component and that's it.

import React from 'react'
import Board from 'react-trello'

export default class App extends React.Component {
	render() {
		return  <Board data={data} />
	}
}

Refer to storybook for detailed examples: https://rcdexta.github.io/react-trello/

Also please refer to this sample project that uses react-trello for usage: https://github.com/rcdexta/react-trello-example

Documentation

Board

This is the container component that encapsulates the lanes and cards

| Name | Type | Description | | ---------------- | -------- | ---------------------------------------- | | draggable | boolean | Makes all cards in the lanes draggable. Default: false | | handleDragStart | function | Callback function triggered when card drag is started: handleDragStart(cardId, laneId) | | handleDragEnd | function | Callback function triggered when card drag ends: handleDragEnd(cardId, sourceLaneId, targetLaneId) | | onLaneScroll | function | Called when a lane is scrolled to the end: onLaneScroll(requestedPage, laneId) | | onCardClick | function | Called when a card is clicked: onCardClick(cardId, metadata, laneId) | | onLaneClick | function | Called when a lane is clicked: onLaneClick(laneId) . Card clicks are not propagated to lane click event | | laneSortFunction | function | Used to specify the logic to sort cards on a lane: laneSortFunction(card1, card2) | | eventBusHandle | function | This is a special function that providers a publishHook to pass new events to the board. See details in Publish Events section | | onDataChange | function | Called everytime the data changes due to user interaction or event bus: onDataChange(newData) | | style | object | Pass css style props to board container | | customCardLayout | function | Boolean to indicate a custom card template will be specified. Add the card component as child to Board | | customLaneHeader | element | Pass custom lane header as react component to modify appearance | | data | object | Actual board data in the form of json | | tagStyle | object | If cards have tags, use this prop to modify their style | | inputPlaceholder | string | Add placeholder to input field for each lane | | inputStyles | object | Add styles to input field for each lane | | handleInput | function | Return results in a callback format: handleInput(laneId, value) |

Refer to stories folder for examples on many more options for customization.

Classes that can be used

| Name | Description | | ---------------- | ---------------------------------------- | | lane-input-wrapper| This class can be used for styling of input and its wrapper |

Publish Events

When defining the board, it is possible to obtain a event hook to the component to publish new events later after the board has been rendered. Refer the example below:

let eventBus = undefined

let setEventBus = (handle) => {
  eventBus = handle
}
//To add a card
eventBus.publish({type: 'ADD_CARD', laneId: 'COMPLETED', card: {id: "M1", title: "Buy Milk", label: "15 mins", description: "Also set reminder"}})

//To remove a card
eventBus.publish({type: 'REMOVE_CARD', laneId: 'PLANNED', cardId: "M1"})

<Board data={data}
       eventBusHandle={setEventBus}/>

The code will move the card Buy Milk from the planned lane to completed lane. We expect that this library can be wired to a backend push api that can alter the state of the board in realtime.

Custom Card Styling

You can completely customize the look-and-feel of each card in any lane by passing in a custom component as child to the Board as seen below:

<Board data={data} customCardLayout>
      <CustomCard />
</Board>

customCardLayout prop must be set to true for the custom card to be rendered

The json content for the card and the card template must agree on the props:

const CustomCard = props => {
  return (
    <div>
      <header
        style={{borderBottom: '1px solid #eee', paddingBottom: 6, marginBottom: 10,
    		 display: 'flex', flexDirection: 'row', justifyContent: 'space-between',
			color: props.cardColor
        }}
      >
        <div style={{ fontSize: 14, fontWeight: 'bold' }}>{props.name}</div>
        <div style={{ fontSize: 11 }}>{props.dueOn}</div>
      </header>
      <div style={{ fontSize: 12, color: '#BD3B36' }}>
        <div style={{ color: '#4C4C4C', fontWeight: 'bold' }}>{props.subTitle}</div>
        <div style={{ padding: '5px 0px' }}><i>{props.body}</i></div>
        <div style={{ marginTop: 10, textAlign: 'center', color: props.cardColor, fontSize: 15, fontWeight: 'bold' }}>
          {props.escalationText}
        </div>
      </div>
    </div>
  )
}

const data = {
    lanes: [
      {
        id: 'lane1',
        title: 'Planned Tasks',
        cards: [
          {
            _id: 'Card1',
            name: 'John Smith',
            dueOn: 'due in a day',
            subTitle: 'SMS received at 12:13pm today',
            body: 'Thanks. Please schedule me for an estimate on Monday.',
            escalationText: 'Escalated to OPS-ESCALATIONS!',
            cardColor: '#BD3B36',
            cardStyle: { borderRadius: 6, boxShadow: '0 0 6px 1px #BD3B36', marginBottom: 15 }
          },
          {
            _id: 'Card2',
            name: 'Card Weathers',
            dueOn: 'due now',
            subTitle: 'Email received at 1:14pm',
            body: 'Is the estimate free, and can someone call me soon?',
            escalationText: 'Escalated to Admin',
            cardColor: '#E08521',
            cardStyle: { borderRadius: 6, boxShadow: '0 0 6px 1px #E08521', marginBottom: 15 }
          }
        ]
      }
    ]
  }

Development

cd react-trello/
yarn install
yarn run storybook

Scripts

  1. npm run lint : Lint all js files
  2. npm run lintfix : fix linting errors of all js files
  3. npm run semantic-release : make a release. Leave it for CI to do.
  4. npm run storybook: Start developing by using storybook
  5. npm run test : Run tests. tests file should be written as *.test.js and using ES2015
  6. npm run test:watch : Watch tests while writing
  7. npm run test:cover : Show coverage report of your tests
  8. npm run test:report : Report test coverage to codecov.io. Leave this for CI
  9. npm run build: transpile all ES6 component files into ES5(commonjs) and put it in dist directory
  10. npm run docs: create static build of storybook in docs directory that can be used for github pages

Learn how to write stories here

License

MIT