* #7349 - Add "use strict" directive to transformed class bodies * Update tests (#7349) * Add test for program with use strict directive (#7349) * Update tests (#7349) * Update source mapping (#7349) * Add test for parent blockStatement with use strict directive (#7349) * Update tests (#7349) * Update tests (#7349) * Update tests (#7349) * Add test for constructor-only class (#7349) * Constructor only classes are strict, too But constructor only that use non-simple parameters must use a strict function wrapper. * Fix test * Wrapper not needed if class is already strict * Revert change to lerna.json
@babel/plugin-transform-react-jsx
Turn JSX into React function calls
Example
React
In
var profile = <div>
<img src="avatar.png" className="profile" />
<h3>{[user.firstName, user.lastName].join(' ')}</h3>
</div>;
Out
var profile = React.createElement("div", null,
React.createElement("img", { src: "avatar.png", className: "profile" }),
React.createElement("h3", null, [user.firstName, user.lastName].join(" "))
);
Custom
In
/** @jsx dom */
var { dom } = require("deku");
var profile = <div>
<img src="avatar.png" className="profile" />
<h3>{[user.firstName, user.lastName].join(' ')}</h3>
</div>;
Out
/** @jsx dom */
var dom = require("deku").dom;
var profile = dom("div", null,
dom("img", { src: "avatar.png", className: "profile" }),
dom("h3", null, [user.firstName, user.lastName].join(" "))
);
Fragments
Fragments are a feature available in React 16.2.0+.
React
In
var descriptions = items.map(item => (
<>
<dt>{item.name}</dt>
<dd>{item.value}</dd>
</>
));
Out
var descriptions = items.map(item => React.createElement(
React.Fragment,
null,
React.createElement("dt", null, item.name),
React.createElement("dd", null, item.value)
));
Custom
In
/** @jsx dom */
/** @jsxFrag DomFrag */
var { dom, DomFrag } = require("deku"); // DomFrag is fictional!
var descriptions = items.map(item => (
<>
<dt>{item.name}</dt>
<dd>{item.value}</dd>
</>
));
Out
/** @jsx dom */
/** @jsxFrag DomFrag */
var { dom, DomFrag } = require("deku"); // DomFrag is fictional!
var descriptions = items.map(item => dom(
DomFrag,
null,
dom("dt", null, item.name),
dom("dd", null, item.value)
));
Note that if a custom pragma is specified, then a custom fragment pragma must also be specified if the <></> is used. Otherwise, an error will be thrown.
Installation
npm install --save-dev @babel/plugin-transform-react-jsx
Usage
Via .babelrc (Recommended)
.babelrc
Without options:
{
"plugins": ["@babel/plugin-transform-react-jsx"]
}
With options:
{
"plugins": [
["@babel/plugin-transform-react-jsx", {
"pragma": "dom", // default pragma is React.createElement
"pragmaFrag": "DomFrag", // default is React.Fragment
"throwIfNamespace": false // defaults to true
}]
]
}
Via CLI
babel --plugins @babel/plugin-transform-react-jsx script.js
Via Node API
require("@babel/core").transform("code", {
plugins: ["@babel/plugin-transform-react-jsx"]
});
Options
pragma
string, defaults to React.createElement.
Replace the function used when compiling JSX expressions.
Note that the @jsx React.DOM pragma has been deprecated as of React v0.12
pragmaFrag
string, defaults to React.Fragment.
Replace the component used when compiling JSX fragments.
useBuiltIns
boolean, defaults to false.
When spreading props, use Object.assign directly instead of Babel's extend helper.
throwIfNamespace
boolean, defaults to true.
Toggles whether or not to throw an error if a XML namespaced tag name is used. For example:
<f:image />
Though the JSX spec allows this, it is disabled by default since React's JSX does not currently have support for it.