| # Defining Custom Elements | |
| In our previous example, we started with a paragraph, but we never actually told Slate anything about the `paragraph` block type. We just let it use its internal default renderer, which uses a plain old `<div>`. | |
| But that's not all you can do. Slate lets you define any type of custom blocks you want, like block quotes, code blocks, list items, etc. | |
| We'll show you how. Let's start with our app from earlier: | |
| ```jsx | |
| const initialValue = [ | |
| { | |
| type: 'paragraph', | |
| children: [{ text: 'A line of text in a paragraph.' }], | |
| }, | |
| ] | |
| const App = () => { | |
| const [editor] = useState(() => withReact(createEditor())) | |
| return ( | |
| <Slate editor={editor} initialValue={initialValue}> | |
| <Editable | |
| onKeyDown={event => { | |
| if (event.key === '&') { | |
| event.preventDefault() | |
| editor.insertText('and') | |
| } | |
| }} | |
| /> | |
| </Slate> | |
| ) | |
| } | |
| ``` | |
| Now let's add "code blocks" to our editor. | |
| The problem is, code blocks won't just be rendered as a plain paragraph, they'll need to be rendered differently. To make that happen, we need to define a "renderer" for `code` element nodes. | |
| Element renderers are just simple React components, like so: | |
| ```jsx | |
| // Define a React component renderer for our code blocks. | |
| const CodeElement = props => { | |
| return ( | |
| <pre {...props.attributes}> | |
| <code>{props.children}</code> | |
| </pre> | |
| ) | |
| } | |
| ``` | |
| Easy enough. | |
| See the `props.attributes` reference? Slate passes attributes that should be rendered on the top-most element of your blocks, so that you don't have to build them up yourself. You **must** mix the attributes into your component. | |
| And see that `props.children` reference? Slate will automatically render all of the children of a block for you, and then pass them to you just like any other React component would, via `props.children`. That way you don't have to muck around with rendering the proper text nodes or anything like that. You **must** render the children as the lowest leaf in your component. | |
| And here's a component for the "default" elements: | |
| ```jsx | |
| const DefaultElement = props => { | |
| return <p {...props.attributes}>{props.children}</p> | |
| } | |
| ``` | |
| Now, let's add that renderer to our `Editor`: | |
| ```jsx | |
| const initialValue = [ | |
| { | |
| type: 'paragraph', | |
| children: [{ text: 'A line of text in a paragraph.' }], | |
| }, | |
| ] | |
| const App = () => { | |
| const [editor] = useState(() => withReact(createEditor())) | |
| // Define a rendering function based on the element passed to `props`. We use | |
| // `useCallback` here to memoize the function for subsequent renders. | |
| const renderElement = useCallback(props => { | |
| switch (props.element.type) { | |
| case 'code': | |
| return <CodeElement {...props} /> | |
| default: | |
| return <DefaultElement {...props} /> | |
| } | |
| }, []) | |
| return ( | |
| <Slate editor={editor} initialValue={initialValue}> | |
| <Editable | |
| // Pass in the `renderElement` function. | |
| renderElement={renderElement} | |
| onKeyDown={event => { | |
| if (event.key === '&') { | |
| event.preventDefault() | |
| editor.insertText('and') | |
| } | |
| }} | |
| /> | |
| </Slate> | |
| ) | |
| } | |
| const CodeElement = props => { | |
| return ( | |
| <pre {...props.attributes}> | |
| <code>{props.children}</code> | |
| </pre> | |
| ) | |
| } | |
| const DefaultElement = props => { | |
| return <p {...props.attributes}>{props.children}</p> | |
| } | |
| ``` | |
| Okay, but now we'll need a way for the user to actually turn a block into a code block. So let's change our `onKeyDown` function to add a `` Ctrl-` `` shortcut that does just that: | |
| ```jsx | |
| // Import the `Editor` and `Transforms` helpers from Slate. | |
| import { Editor, Transforms, Element } from 'slate' | |
| const initialValue = [ | |
| { | |
| type: 'paragraph', | |
| children: [{ text: 'A line of text in a paragraph.' }], | |
| }, | |
| ] | |
| const App = () => { | |
| const [editor] = useState(() => withReact(createEditor())) | |
| const renderElement = useCallback(props => { | |
| switch (props.element.type) { | |
| case 'code': | |
| return <CodeElement {...props} /> | |
| default: | |
| return <DefaultElement {...props} /> | |
| } | |
| }, []) | |
| return ( | |
| <Slate editor={editor} initialValue={initialValue}> | |
| <Editable | |
| renderElement={renderElement} | |
| onKeyDown={event => { | |
| if (event.key === '`' && event.ctrlKey) { | |
| // Prevent the "`" from being inserted by default. | |
| event.preventDefault() | |
| // Otherwise, set the currently selected blocks type to "code". | |
| Transforms.setNodes( | |
| editor, | |
| { type: 'code' }, | |
| { match: n => Element.isElement(n) && Editor.isBlock(editor, n) } | |
| ) | |
| } | |
| }} | |
| /> | |
| </Slate> | |
| ) | |
| } | |
| const CodeElement = props => { | |
| return ( | |
| <pre {...props.attributes}> | |
| <code>{props.children}</code> | |
| </pre> | |
| ) | |
| } | |
| const DefaultElement = props => { | |
| return <p {...props.attributes}>{props.children}</p> | |
| } | |
| ``` | |
| Now, if you press `` Ctrl-` `` the block your cursor is in should turn into a code block! Magic! | |
| But we forgot one thing. When you hit `` Ctrl-` `` again, it should change the code block back into a paragraph. To do that, we'll need to add a bit of logic to change the type we set based on whether any of the currently selected blocks are already a code block: | |
| ```jsx | |
| const initialValue = [ | |
| { | |
| type: 'paragraph', | |
| children: [{ text: 'A line of text in a paragraph.' }], | |
| }, | |
| ] | |
| const App = () => { | |
| const [editor] = useState(() => withReact(createEditor())) | |
| const renderElement = useCallback(props => { | |
| switch (props.element.type) { | |
| case 'code': | |
| return <CodeElement {...props} /> | |
| default: | |
| return <DefaultElement {...props} /> | |
| } | |
| }, []) | |
| return ( | |
| <Slate editor={editor} initialValue={initialValue}> | |
| <Editable | |
| renderElement={renderElement} | |
| onKeyDown={event => { | |
| if (event.key === '`' && event.ctrlKey) { | |
| event.preventDefault() | |
| // Determine whether any of the currently selected blocks are code blocks. | |
| const [match] = Editor.nodes(editor, { | |
| match: n => n.type === 'code', | |
| }) | |
| // Toggle the block type depending on whether there's already a match. | |
| Transforms.setNodes( | |
| editor, | |
| { type: match ? 'paragraph' : 'code' }, | |
| { match: n => Element.isElement(n) && Editor.isBlock(editor, n) } | |
| ) | |
| } | |
| }} | |
| /> | |
| </Slate> | |
| ) | |
| } | |
| ``` | |
| And there you have it! If you press `` Ctrl-` `` while inside a code block, it should turn back into a paragraph! | |