A set of React components for building recursive navigation UIs for the web
Makes defining recursive navs as simple as this
const Header = () => (
<Nav>
<NavItem title="Item 1" href="/" />
<NavItem title="Item 2" href="/" />
<NavItem title="Sub Nav">
<Nav>
<NavItem title="Subitem 1" href="/" />
<NavItem title="Subitem 2" href="/" />
</Nav>
</NavItem>
</Nav>
);
It's also possible to render from JSON by taking advantage from the react-from-json
library.
npm install --save react-skeletal-nav
react-skeletal-nav
provides 3 skeleton components:
<Nav />
- The root navigation component.<NavItem />
- A navigation item, such as a link to a page, or link to a nested<Nav />
<NavList />
- A group of<NavItem />
components. Useful for segmenting your items. Optional.
You need to extend these components for use in your app. It's easiest to use the HOCs provided, but you can also use render props.
Nav.js
import React from 'react';
import { withNav } from 'react-skeletal-nav';
export const Nav = withNav(
({ children, goBack, route, isStack, isVisible }) =>
// Only render stack nav
isStack && (
// Hide if not visible, but don't unmount so nested Navs stay mounted
<div style={{ display: isVisible ? 'block' : 'none' }}>
{/* Never render the back button on the "root" nav */}
{route !== 'root' && <button onClick={goBack}>Back</button>}
{/* Render children, including nested Navs */}
{children}
</div>
)
);
NavItem.js
import React from 'react';
import { withNavItem } from 'react-skeletal-nav';
export const NavItem = withNavItem(({ children, href, onClick, title }) => (
<div>
{href && <a href="">{title}</a>}
{!href && <button onClick={onClick}>{title}</button>}
{/* Render nested navs */}
{children}
</div>
));
App.js
import Nav from './Nav';
import NavItem from './NavItem';
export default () => (
<Nav>
<NavItem title="Item 1" href="/" />
<NavItem title="Item 2" href="/" />
<NavItem title="Sub Nav">
<Nav>
<NavItem title="Subitem 1" href="/" />
<NavItem title="Subitem 2" href="/" />
</Nav>
</NavItem>
</Nav>
);
We can also render complex navigation UI from JSON, using the react-from-json
library. This is particularly useful when working with a headless CMS.
import React from 'react';
import ReactFromJSON from 'react-from-json';
import Nav from './Nav';
import NavItem from './NavItem';
const componentMapping = {
Nav,
NavItem
};
const data = {
type: 'Nav',
props: {
children: [
{ type: 'NavItem', props: { href: '/', title: 'Item 1' } },
{ type: 'NavItem', props: { href: '/', title: 'Item 2' } },
{
type: 'NavItem',
props: {
children: {
type: 'Nav',
props: {
children: [
{
type: 'NavItem',
props: { href: '/', title: 'Subitem 1' }
},
{
type: 'NavItem',
props: { href: '/', title: 'Subitem 2' }
}
]
}
},
title: 'SubNav'
}
}
]
}
};
export default () => <ReactFromJSON mapping={componentMapping} entry={data} />;
TBD
Follow the angular verison of conventional commits when committing to this repo, as this generates the CHANGELOG.md and ensures we follow semver.
To bump version, generate changelog and prep for release, run:
yarn release
then to publish
npm publish
MIT © chrisvxd