@seaneiros/react-bem

1.2.1 • Public • Published

React Bem

A set of handy decorators to make BEM class management more declarative.

Installation

To use HOC decorator you should use React 15.0 or later

npm install --save @seaneiros/react-bem

This assumes that you’re using npm package manager with a module bundler like Webpack or Browserify to consume CommonJS modules.

If you don't use npm or a modern module bundler, and would rather prefer a UMD files, you can grab pre-built versions from @seaneiros/react-bem/lib/umd.

Usage

Static field

It's the default type of exported decorator (due to lower memory consumption).

Basic example

// MyComponent.js

import React from 'react';
import bem from '@seaneiros/react-bem';

const MyComponent = props => {
  const { bem } = MyComponent;

  return (
    <div className={bem.block()}>
      <div className={bem.element('element')}>
        My decorated component
      </div>
    </div>
  );
};

export default bem({ block: 'block' })(MyComponent);
// somewhere in the app

...
render() {
  return (
    <MyComponent />
  );
}

will result

<div class="block">
  <div class="block__element">
    My decorated component
  </div>
</div>

Passing props

Let's make our previous example less dumb.

// MyComponent.js

import React from 'react';
import bem from '@seaneiros/react-bem';

const MyComponent = props => {
  const { bem } = MyComponent;

  return (
    <div className={bem.block(props)}>
      <div className={bem.element('element')}>
        My decorated component
      </div>
    </div>
  );
};

export default bem({
  block: 'block',
  modifiers: [ 'inline' ],
})(MyComponent);

Notice that we pass props as the first parameter to the bem.block method.

<MyComponent className="externalClass" inline />

will turn into

<div class="externalClass block block--inline">
  <div class="block__element">
    My decorated component
  </div>
</div>

More modifiers

That was pretty cool, but what if we need to set some styles within the component?

// MyComponent.js

import React from 'react';
import bem from '@seaneiros/react-bem';

const MyComponent = props => {
  const { type } = props;
  const { bem } = MyComponent;

  const color = type === 'success' ? 'green' : 'red';

  return (
    <div className={bem.block(props, { type })}>
      <div className={bem.element('element', { color })}>
        My decorated component
      </div>
    </div>
  );
};

export default bem({
  block: 'block',
  modifiers: [ 'inline' ],
})(MyComponent);

Now we need to pass type property to compute our styles

<MyComponent
  className="externalClass"
  type="success"
  inline
/>
<div class="externalClass block block--inline block--type-success">
  <div class="block__element block__element--color-green">
    My decorated component
  </div>
</div>

Sometimes (for some reason) you may need to set more than one value to modifier. Let's improve our previous example

// MyComponent.js

import React from 'react';
import bem from '@seaneiros/react-bem';

const MyComponent = props => {
  const { type } = props;
  const { bem } = MyComponent;

  const color = type === 'success' ? 'green' : 'red';

  return (
    <div className={bem.block(props, { type, no: [ 'margin', 'border' ] })}>
      <div className={bem.element('element', { color })}>
        My decorated component
      </div>
    </div>
  );
};

export default bem({
  block: 'block',
  modifiers: [ 'inline' ],
})(MyComponent);

Now we'll get

<div class="externalClass block block--inline block--type-success block--no-margin block--no-border">
  <div class="block__element block__element--color-green">
    My decorated component
  </div>
</div>

HOC

You can also use HOC to manage styles; syntax is pretty much the same

// MyComponent.js

import React from 'react';
import { bemHoc as bem } from '@seaneiros/react-bem';

const MyComponent = props => {
  const { type } = props;
  const { bem } = MyComponent;

  const color = type === 'success' ? 'green' : 'red';

  return (
    <div className={bem.block({ type, no: [ 'margin', 'border' ] })}>
      <div className={bem.element('element', { color })}>
        My decorated component
      </div>
    </div>
  );
};

export default bem({
  block: 'block',
  modifiers: [ 'inline' ],
})(MyComponent);

Notice, that we don't need to pass props as the first parameter to bem.block method anymore.

HOC will create helper instance for every decorated component, so it's not recommended to use it for lists.

Hook

Since React v 16.8 we can use hooks in our functional components

// MyComponent.js

import React from 'react';
import { useBem } from '@seaneiros/react-bem';

const MyComponent = props => {
  const bem = useBem({
    block: 'block',
    modifiers: [
      'someExternalModifier',
    ],
  }, props);

  return (
    <div className={bem.block({ modifier: true })}>
      <div className={bem.element('element')}>
        My component
      </div>
    </div>
  );
};

Helper

Although you are expected to use decorators, it is still possible to use helper itself.

import { BemHelper } from '@seaneiros/react-bem';

const bem = new BemHelper({
  block: 'someBlock',
  modifiers: [ ... ],
});

// use as a static field
...

Configuration

It is possible to change delimiters as you want

bem({
  block: 'someBlock',
  modifiers: [ ... ],
  config: {
    element: '~~',
    modifier: '::',
    modifierValue: '_',
  },
})(MyComponent);

License

ISC

Versions

Current Tags

  • Version
    Downloads (Last 7 Days)
    • Tag
  • 1.2.1
    23
    • latest

Version History

Package Sidebar

Install

npm i @seaneiros/react-bem

Weekly Downloads

23

Version

1.2.1

License

ISC

Unpacked Size

37.4 kB

Total Files

12

Last publish

Collaborators

  • seaneiros