When splitting methods into seperate class files in react native how do I then access those classes from another file?
For example in included.js I have the following:
'use strict'
import React, { Component } from 'react';
import {
AsyncStorage,
} from 'react-native';
var myClass = React.createClass({
doStuff: function(){
return 'Hello';
},
render: function(){ //This is required???
},
})
module.exports = myClass;
In my index.ios.js file I have:
var myClass = require('./included');
How do I now call a function from myClass?
I'm new to using react native and suspect my current approach is not ideal but haven't found a clear example of how to seperate my code. For example external API calling methods in a class from the classes that build the views in my app.
You can't just simply call a method in another component. React has its own design pattern and it does not allow that.
Accodring to React docs:
For communication between two components that don't have a
parent-child relationship, you can set up your own global event
system. Subscribe to events in componentDidMount(), unsubscribe in
componentWillUnmount(), and call setState() when you receive an event.
Related
I am working on a Svelte project, but it contains some web components.
The issue I am facing is that some web components defined by the customElements.define() Typescript function are not usable unless I import them specifically in the user component.
For example, a web component is defined in the following way:
// File name is oneWebComponent.js
export class OneWebComponent extends HTMLElement {
...
customElements.define('one-web-component', OneWebComponent);
}
Then, there is another JS file, which contains a "factory" function that creates different types of Web Components:
export const createElement = (tagName) => {
return document.createElement(tagName);
}
If I call it like createElement('one-web-component'), the resulting component is not really the one defined in OneWebComponent. I know that because the functions defined there are not callable (error: XXX is not a function).
But if I import oneWebComponent.js in the factory file like below, it works correctly:
// This line is newly added:
import './oneWebComponent.js';
export const createElement = (tagName) => {
return document.createElement(tagName);
}
That means, if I have multiple types of web components, and the factory function is called in multiple places, I will have to import each type of web component in each place, which is tedious.
I wonder if there is a way to just make the components defined by customElements.define() globally usable?
That means, no imports needed, just passing the tag name into document.createElement() and it will create the web component correctly.
Am I missing any configs?
Thanks in advance!
As #Bergi pointed out, the customElements.define() function is not executed if the file is not imported anywhere.
So I only needed to import all of the web components in the top level of the app, a file like app.svelte or main.js for example, then the function will run, and the tags are defined and usable across the app.
I have a Vue 2 project made with Vue CLI, and I plan to distribute it as a library, ideally with the dependencies and Vue syntax stuff abstracted away by some kind of wrapper script. I would like to allow this kind of interaction:
// mount the component on a plain JS webpage
const myComponent = new MyComponent('#my-component');
// handle events from the component in vanilla JS
myComponent.on('load', someHandler);
// (A.) call a component method and get a return value
const processedData = myComponent.process(123);
// (B.) access/mutate reactive component data properties
myComponent.setMessage('Hello world!');
I have tried changing the "build target" to build a Libary or a Web Component as mentioned in the Vue documentation. I can mount the library component just fine, and handle events, but it doesn't mention how I might interact with the component data from outside the Vue VM (see comments A and B).
How can I access Vue component methods and data properties from outside the Vue VM, in vanilla JS?
To access the Vue component properties (and methods) outside of the VM, you can mount it with a "template ref" like this:
const vm = new Vue({
components: {
MyComponent,
},
template: `
<my-component
ref="myComponent"
/>
`,
}).$mount('#mount-element");
and then you can call its methods like this:
vm.$refs.myComponent.someFunction();
You'll get the returned values and it will access/mutate reactive properties inside the VM as expected.
To use the class syntax described in the original question, we can create a simple class to wrap the vue component:
// import the component built by Vue CLI with the "library" build target
// (puts `MyComponent` in the global namespace)
import './MyComponent.umd.min.js';
import Vue from 'https://unpkg.com/vue#2/dist/vue.esm.browser.min.js';
export default class {
constructor(mountElement) {
// mount vue VM with a template ref to access its properties
const thisClass = this;
this.vm = new Vue({
components: {
MyComponent,
},
template: `
<my-component
ref="myComponent"
/>
`,
}).$mount(mountElement);
this.component = this.vm.$refs.myComponent;
}
// define methods that could call this.component's functions
someFunction() {
// do stuff
return this.component.someFunction()
}
}
It seems to work pretty well. A possible improvement would be to build the component library with a different tool, since Vue CLI v3 (with Vue v2 projects) can't output ESM module files, so the best we can do is a UMD modle that gets defined globally.
Please is there a way to create a helper function on a root component in vue and also make the function accessible in all child components?
You can create helper functions and use it as a plugin. In case of you are using nuxt.js, you can create helpers.js in plugins and register it in nuxt.config.js file.
import Vue from 'vue'
import helpers from './helpers'
const plugin = {
install () {
Vue.prototype.$helpers = helpers
}
}
Vue.use(plugin)
In helpers.js, you can define all helper functions.
export default {
cloneObj(val) {
return JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(val));
}
};
Then you can use it in any child components like this:
this.$helpers.cloneObj()
You need to store it in a separate file because it's frustrating to pass it as a prop from one component to another and that's the main idea of why state management like Vuex is a better solution because it provides a centralized state manage which you can access from any component
Anybody know how to do add a global variable in Vue 3 ?
in Vue 2 we use this in the main.js file:
Vue.prototype.$myGlobalVariable = globalVariable
The most direct replacement is app.config.globalProperties. See:
https://vuejs.org/api/application.html#app-config-globalproperties
So:
Vue.prototype.$myGlobalVariable = globalVariable
becomes:
const app = createApp(RootComponent)
app.config.globalProperties.$myGlobalVariable = globalVariable
This is scoped to a particular application rather than being global as it was with Vue.prototype. This is by design, all 'global' configuration options are now scoped to an application.
The relevant RFC is here:
https://github.com/vuejs/rfcs/blob/master/active-rfcs/0009-global-api-change.md
Properties added to globalProperties will be available via the component instance for all components within the application. So if you're using the Options API you'll be able to access them using this.$myGlobalVariable, just like you could with Vue.prototype. They'll also be available in the template without the this., e.g. {{ $myGlobalVariable }}.
If you're using the Composition API then you'll still be able to use these properties within the template, but you won't have access to the component instance within setup, so these properties won't be accessible there.
While hacks involving getCurrentInstance() can be used to access globalProperties within setup, those hacks involve using undocumented APIs and are not the recommended approach.
Instead, application-level provide/inject (also discussed in that RFC) can be used as an alternative to Vue.prototype:
const app = createApp(RootComponent)
app.provide('myGlobalVariable', globalVariable)
In the descendant component this can then be accessed using inject. e.g. With <script setup>:
<script setup>
import { inject } from 'vue'
const myGlobalVariable = inject('myGlobalVariable')
</script>
Or with an explicit setup function:
import { inject } from 'vue'
export default {
setup() {
const myGlobalVariable = inject('myGlobalVariable')
// Expose it to the template, if required
return {
myGlobalVariable
}
}
}
Or with the Options API:
export default {
inject: ['myGlobalVariable']
}
Docs: https://vuejs.org/api/application.html#app-provide
The idea here is that the component can explicitly declare the property rather than inheriting it by magic. That avoids problems like name collisions, so there's no need to use a $ prefix. It can also help to make it clearer where exactly a property is coming from.
It is common for the inject function to be wrapped in a composable. For example, the useRoute composable exposed by Vue Router is just a wrapper around inject.
In addition to globalProperties and provide/inject, there are various other techniques that might be used to solve the same problems as Vue.prototype. For example, ES modules, stores, or even global mixins. These aren't necessarily direct answers to the specific question posted here, but I've gone into more detail describing the various approaches at:
https://skirtles-code.github.io/vue-examples/patterns/global-properties.html
Which approach you prefer will depend on your circumstances.
How to add a global variable using Vue 3 and vue-cli (or Vite)
Note: You can drop the dollar sign from your $globalVariable and just use globalVariable, just like in the documentation.
Initially your main.js file looks something like this (adding router for common use case):
import { createApp } from 'vue'
import { App } from './App.vue'
import { router } from './router'
createApp(App).use(router).mount('#app')
To use add the global variable using Vue 3 and the vue-cli or Vite:
import { createApp } from 'vue'
import { App } from './App.vue'
import { router } from './router'
// 1. Assign app to a variable
let app = createApp(App)
// 2. Assign the global variable before mounting
app.config.globalProperties.globalVar = 'globalVar'
// 3. Use router and mount app
app.use(router).mount('#app')
Then to access the variables in components like this:
<script>
export default {
data() {
return {
myVar: this.globalVar
}
}
}
</script>
like in the template like this:
<template>
<h1>{{ globalVar }}</h1>
</template>
And that's it. Happy coding!
About Global Variables and Composition API
According to the very bottom of samayo's answer on this post, global variables are only available on the Options API.
Quoting the bottom of his answer:
Note: This is only for the Options API. Evan You (Vue creator) says: "config.globalProperties are meant as an escape hatch for replicating the behavior of Vue.prototype. In setup functions, simply import what you need or explicitly use provide/inject to expose properties to app.
I recommend to use provide/inject approach as follows :
in main.js :
import {createApp} from 'vue'
let app=createApp({
provide:{
globalVariable:123
}
}).$mount('#app')
in some child or grand-child component do :
export default{
name:'some-compo',
inject:['globalVariable'],
//then access this.globalVariable as property in you component
...
}
for composition api and script setup :
import { inject } from 'vue'
let globalVar=inject('globalVariable')
If possible you should use imports or provide/inject. Another way to define global variables/functions and use them would be using globalProperties (although this seems to be considered more of an anti-pattern). But if a library you use uses globalProperties then you can use it like this. This also works with global functions.
const app = Vue.createApp({})
app.config.globalProperties.$http = () => {} // global function
app.config.globalProperties.$globalVariable = 'Jimmy' // global variable
1. Using options API
mounted() {
console.log(this.$globalVariable)
}
2. Using setup method
<script setup>
import { getCurrentInstance } from 'vue'
const app = getCurrentInstance()
const progressBar = app.appContext.config.globalProperties.$globalVariable
console.log(this.$globalVariable)
</script>
For those of you who are confused about how to access globalProperties in the setup() method, you can use getCurrentInstance() as in the following documentation.
https://v3.vuejs.org/api/composition-api.html#getcurrentinstance
In my case I had to create a global var and get the data from a script.
Used provide and inject:
In main.js:
import { createApp } from 'vue'
import App from './App.vue'
const app = createApp(App);
app.provide('message',document.querySelector('script[name="nameSCRIPT"]').innerHTML.split('=').slice(1).join('=').slice(1,-1));
app.mount('#app')
In index.html:
<script name="nameSCRIPT">nameSCRIPT="HELLO"</script>
In child component:
inject:['message'],
mounted(){
console.log(this.message)
},
In my angular app I use angular-redux for application state management. In my main module I defined my redux store. Like this:
export class MainModule {
constructor(private ngRedux: NgRedux<MainAppState>,
private devTools: DevToolsExtension) {
let enhancers = [];
if (environment.production === false && devTools.isEnabled()) {
enhancers = [...enhancers, devTools.enhancer()];
}
this.ngRedux.configureStore(
reducer,
{} as MainAppState,
[],
enhancers);
}
}
I created new child module, which contains some components. These components should access to application state. In one of these components I access via #select to store, but this doesn't work. Here is how I access to store:
export function getLanguage(state: LanguageState) { return state.userLanguage; }
And this code I have in my ChildComponent class:
export class ChildComponent implements OnInit {
#select(getLanguage) savedUserLanguage$: Observable<LanguageState>;
// more code
}
How can I access to application state store from child modules? What should I import in child module? Will It be better to create own module only for redux store handling? Maybe I forgot something?
I use Angular v4 and #angular-redux/store v6.
I'd recommend creating a separate module that just contains your store, e.g. StoreModule. You can then import your StoreModule into all your child modules and access your store from there.
This is the way they go in the official example app:
StoreModule: https://github.com/angular-redux/example-app/blob/master/src/app/store/module.ts
Child Module: https://github.com/angular-redux/example-app/blob/master/src/app/elephants/module.ts
Component in child module: https://github.com/angular-redux/example-app/blob/master/src/app/elephants/page.ts
I was thinking about refactoring some ugly old JavaScript code that uses prototypal inheritance into an Angular 7+ project. I was asking myself pretty much the same question. Inspired by my udemy Angular course, I tried an experiment with a ngrx store and lazy loaded modules.
(Keep in mind that ngrx is SIMILAR to #angular-redux, but it's NOT the same thing. See https://ngrx.io/docs for details.)
Here it is.
I create the store in the main module with StoreModule.forRoot and in each lazy loaded module, I create a reference to the store with StoreModule.forFeature.
(See https://ngrx.io/api/store/StoreModule for details.)
When I dispatch actions on the store with the lazy loaded components, those actions (and corresponding reducers) seem to change the value to which the main app component subscribes.
Also, when I dispatch actions on the store with the main app component, those actions (and corresponding reducers) seem to change the value to which the lazy loaded components subscribe.
Also, it's hard to explain what I did in a simple 200-500 character block so I had to use a github project.