From 09d4eb0684eac96747778656fc4a8f8085c41388 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jacky Zhao Date: Mon, 7 Aug 2023 23:57:24 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] fix notes --- .prettierignore | 1 - content/advanced/creating components.md | 33 +++++++++++++++---------- content/advanced/paths.md | 4 +-- quartz/styles/base.scss | 1 - 4 files changed, 22 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-) diff --git a/.prettierignore b/.prettierignore index 2da3adff..3c0687a5 100644 --- a/.prettierignore +++ b/.prettierignore @@ -1,4 +1,3 @@ public node_modules .quartz-cache -**/*.md diff --git a/content/advanced/creating components.md b/content/advanced/creating components.md index 6cdaed19..95c71fd6 100644 --- a/content/advanced/creating components.md +++ b/content/advanced/creating components.md @@ -16,15 +16,17 @@ Normally on the web, we write layout code using HTML which looks something like This piece of HTML represents an article with a leading header that says "An article header" and a paragraph that contains the text "Some content". This is normally combined with CSS to style the page and JavaScript to add interactivity. -However, HTML doesn't let you create reusable templates. If you wanted to create a new page, you would need to copy and paste the above snippet and edit the header and content yourself. This isn't great if we have a lot of content on our site that shares a lot of similar layout. The smart people who created React also had similar thoughts, inventing the concept of JSX Components to solve the code duplication problem. +However, HTML doesn't let you create reusable templates. If you wanted to create a new page, you would need to copy and paste the above snippet and edit the header and content yourself. This isn't great if we have a lot of content on our site that shares a lot of similar layout. The smart people who created React also had similar thoughts, inventing the concept of JSX Components to solve the code duplication problem. In effect, components allow you to write a JavaScript function that takes some data and produces HTML as an output. **While Quartz doesn't use React, it uses the same component concept to allow you to easily express layout templates in your Quartz site.** > [!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. + ## An Example Component ### Constructor + Component files are written in `.tsx` files that live in the `quartz/components` folder. These are re-exported in `quartz/components/index.ts` so you can use them in layouts and other components more easily. Each component file should have a default export that satisfies the `QuartzComponentConstructor` function signature. It is a function that takes in a single optional parameter `opts` and returns a Quartz Component. The type of the parameters `ops` is defined by the interface `Options` which you as the component creator also decide. @@ -37,16 +39,16 @@ interface Options { } const defaultOptions: Options = { - favouriteNumber: 42 + favouriteNumber: 42, } export default ((userOpts?: Options) => { const opts = { ...userOpts, ...defaultOpts } function YourComponent(props: QuartzComponentProps) { - if (opts.favouriteNumber < 0) { - return null - } - + if (opts.favouriteNumber < 0) { + return null + } + return

My favourite number is {opts.favouriteNumber}

} @@ -55,6 +57,7 @@ export default ((userOpts?: Options) => { ``` ### Props + The Quartz component itself (lines 11-17 highlighted above) looks like a React component. It takes in properties (sometimes called [props](https://react.dev/learn/passing-props-to-a-component)) and returns JSX. All Quartz components accept the same set of props which are defined in `QuartzComponentProps`: @@ -71,14 +74,15 @@ export type QuartzComponentProps = { ``` - `fileData`: Any metadata [[making plugins|plugins]] may have added to the current page. - - `fileData.slug`: slug of the current page. - - `fileData.frontmatter`: any frontmatter parsed. + - `fileData.slug`: slug of the current page. + - `fileData.frontmatter`: any frontmatter parsed. - `cfg`: The `configuration` field in `quartz.config.ts`. - `tree`: the resulting [HTML AST](https://github.com/syntax-tree/hast) after processing and transforming the file. This is useful if you'd like to render the content using [hast-util-to-jsx-runtime](https://github.com/syntax-tree/hast-util-to-jsx-runtime) (you can find an example of this in `quartz/components/pages/Content.tsx`). - `allFiles`: Metadata for all files that have been parsed. Useful for doing page listings or figuring out the overall site structure. - `displayClass`: a utility class that indicates a preference from the user about how to render it in a mobile or desktop setting. Helpful if you want to conditionally hide a component on mobile or desktop. ### Styling + Quartz components can also define a `.css` property on the actual function component which will get picked up by Quartz. This is expected to be a CSS string which can either be inlined or imported from a `.scss` file. Note that inlined styles **must** be plain vanilla CSS. @@ -116,15 +120,18 @@ export default (() => { ``` > [!warning] -> Quartz does not use CSS modules so any styles you declare here apply *globally*. If you only want it to apply to your component, make sure you use specific class names and selectors. +> Quartz does not use CSS modules so any styles you declare here apply _globally_. If you only want it to apply to your component, make sure you use specific class names and selectors. + ### Scripts and Interactivity - - listening for the nav event - - best practice: anything here should unmount any existing event handlers to prevent memory leaks + +- listening for the nav event + - best practice: anything here should unmount any existing event handlers to prevent memory leaks ### Using a Component -#### In a layout -#### In the configuration +#### In a layout + +#### In the configuration > [!hint] > Look in `quartz/components` for more examples of components in Quartz as reference for your own components! diff --git a/content/advanced/paths.md b/content/advanced/paths.md index 2a5e09fb..49651194 100644 --- a/content/advanced/paths.md +++ b/content/advanced/paths.md @@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ It would be silly to type these all as `string` and call it a day as it's pretty Luckily, we can mimic nominal typing using [brands](https://www.typescriptlang.org/play#example/nominal-typing). ```typescript -// instead of +// instead of type ClientSlug = string // we do @@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ type ClientSlug = string & { __brand: "client" } const slug: ClientSlug = "some random slug" ``` -While this prevents most typing mistakes *within* our nominal typing system (e.g. mistaking a server slug for a client slug), it doesn't prevent us from *accidentally* mistaking a string for a client slug when we forcibly cast it. +While this prevents most typing mistakes _within_ our nominal typing system (e.g. mistaking a server slug for a client slug), it doesn't prevent us from _accidentally_ mistaking a string for a client slug when we forcibly cast it. Thus, we still need to be careful when casting from a string to one of these nominal types in the 'entrypoints', illustrated with hexagon shapes in the diagram below. diff --git a/quartz/styles/base.scss b/quartz/styles/base.scss index 5a6b5dbc..bd072d70 100644 --- a/quartz/styles/base.scss +++ b/quartz/styles/base.scss @@ -42,7 +42,6 @@ ul, hyphens: auto; } - .math { font-size: 1.1rem; &.math-display {