diff --git a/content/advanced/creating components.md b/content/advanced/creating components.md index a907013..e9f1385 100644 --- a/content/advanced/creating components.md +++ b/content/advanced/creating components.md @@ -140,17 +140,16 @@ export default (() => { ` return YourComponent }) satisfies QuartzComponentConstructor - ``` > [!hint] > For those coming from React, Quartz components are different from React components in that it only uses JSX for templating and layout. Hooks like `useEffect`, `useState`, etc. are not rendered and other properties that accept functions like `onClick` handlers will not work. Instead, do it using a regular JS script that modifies the DOM element directly. -As the names suggest, the `.beforeDOMLoaded` scripts are executed *before* the page is done loading so it doesn't have access to any elements on the page. This is mostly used to prefetch any critical data. +As the names suggest, the `.beforeDOMLoaded` scripts are executed _before_ the page is done loading so it doesn't have access to any elements on the page. This is mostly used to prefetch any critical data. The `.afterDOMLoaded` script executes once the page has been completely loaded. This is a good place to setup anything that should last for the duration of a site visit (e.g. getting something saved from local storage). -If you need to create an `afterDOMLoaded` script that depends on *page specific* elements that may change when navigating to a new page, you can listen for the `"nav"` event that gets fired whenever a page loads (which may happen on navigation if [[SPA Routing]] is enabled). +If you need to create an `afterDOMLoaded` script that depends on _page specific_ elements that may change when navigating to a new page, you can listen for the `"nav"` event that gets fired whenever a page loads (which may happen on navigation if [[SPA Routing]] is enabled). ```ts document.addEventListener("nav", () => { @@ -163,7 +162,9 @@ document.addEventListener("nav", () => { ``` It is best practice to also unmount any existing event handlers to prevent memory leaks. + #### Importing Code + Of course, it isn't always practical (nor desired!) to write your code as a string literal in the component. Quartz supports importing component code through `.inline.ts` files. @@ -181,20 +182,21 @@ export default (() => { YourComponent.afterDOM = script return YourComponent }) satisfies QuartzComponentConstructor - ``` ```ts title="quartz/components/scripts/graph.inline.ts" // any imports here are bundled for the browser import * as d3 from "d3" -document.getElementById('btn').onclick = () => { - alert('button clicked!') +document.getElementById("btn").onclick = () => { + alert("button clicked!") } ``` Additionally, like what is shown in the example above, you can import packages in `.inline.ts` files. This will be bundled by Quartz and included in the actual script. -### Using a Component + +### Using a Component + After creating your custom component, re-export it in `quartz/components/index.ts`: ```ts title="quartz/components/index.ts" {4,10} @@ -203,12 +205,7 @@ import Content from "./pages/Content" import Darkmode from "./Darkmode" import YourComponent from "./YourComponent" -export { - ArticleTitle, - Content, - Darkmode, - YourComponent -} +export { ArticleTitle, Content, Darkmode, YourComponent } ``` Then, you can use it like any other component in `quartz.layout.ts` via `Component.YourComponent()`. See the [[configuration#Layout|layout]] section for more details. @@ -220,10 +217,12 @@ import YourComponent from "./YourComponent" export default (() => { function AnotherComponent(props: QuartzComponentProps) { - return
It's nested!
-It's nested!
+