This is a Babel plugin that annotates React components with stable attributes that can be used to search and select using FullStory. This is most useful when using a React system that generates dynamic names for Components or rearranges elements.
For React on the web the attributes are data-component
, data-element
, and data-source-file
. For React Native the attributes are dataComponent
, dataElement
, and dataSourceFile
.
The component attribute names the React.Component
and the element attribute names the original native elements like View
or Image
or an emitter of DOM elements like Fragment
.
Example input:
class HelloComponent extends Component {
render() {
return <div>
<h1>Hello world</h1>
</div>;
}
}
Example JS output:
class HelloComponent extends Component {
render() {
return React.createElement("div", {
"data-component": "HelloComponent",
"data-file-source": "hello-component.js"
}, React.createElement("h1", {
null
}, "Hello world"));
}
}
Final render:
<div data-component="HelloComponent" data-file-source="hello-component.js">
<h1>Hello world</h1>
</div>
To activate React Native support you must pass in a native
plugin option like so:
plugins: [
["@fullstory/babel-plugin-annotate-react", { native: true }]
]
By default, the plugin does not annotate React.Fragment
s because they may or may not contain a child that ends up being an HTML element.
An example with no child element:
const componentName = () => (
<Fragment>Hello, there.</Fragment>
);
An example with child elements:
const componentName = () => (
<Fragment>
Some text
<h1>Hello, there.</h1> /* This one could be annotated */
<a href="#foo">Click me</a>
</Fragment>
);
If you would like the plugin to attempt to annotate the first HTML element created by a Fragment (if it exists) then set the annotate-fragments
flag:
plugins: [
["@fullstory/babel-plugin-annotate-react", { "annotate-fragments": true }]
]
We have a few samples to demonstrate this plugin:
Much of the logic for adding the attributes originated in the transform-react-qa-classes plugin.