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doca-bootstrap-theme

Simple Twitter Boostrap 3 based theme for doca.

It's supposed to be used in combination with doca - a tool that scaffolds API documentation based on JSON HyperSchemas.

Usage

npm install -g doca
doca init -t bootstrap

This creates a new API documentation with doca-bootstrap-theme as a dependency.

How to create your own theme

The best way is to fork and modify this repository. The integration with doca is pretty loose and it makes just a few assumptions about your theme.

React Components

Doca expects to import two React components from your theme (otherwise it fails):

  • App - main root component that gets all schemas through the props
  • Head - <head></head> part of the final documentation

App component

App component can expect to receive two props:

  • this.props.schemas : Immutable.List - an array of all imported schemas, the schema format can be found here - it's the ouput of json-schema-example-loader. However, the whole data structure is additionally turned into immutable one by Immutable.js library and Immutable.fromJS() function. It deeply converts all arrays into Immutable.List and all objects into Immutable.Map. Thus, you have to use slightly different methods for iteration or prop access.
  • this.props.config : object - a plain object exported by users from config.js, it should always have the key title.

Head component

Head component can expect to receive two props:

  • this.props.title : string - the title specified in config.js

  • this.props.cssBundle : string - you should put this code into your Head component:

    {this.props.cssBundle && <link href={this.props.cssBundle} rel="stylesheet" />}

State

  • You should just use native this.state and keep the state in your components. It's perfect for things like toggling.
  • Advanced: If your theme is getting bigger (a lot of state everywhere), you can consider using Redux. Doca is already using Redux for handling schemas. Your theme can export a reducer (check this pattern in our cf-ui components). However, it's up to you to modify the scaffolded application and import your reducer in /src/client/reducers/index.js. Doca app currently doesn't do any assumptions about this (it could auto-import the theme reducer in future though). So if you want to make your theme useful out-of-the-box, try to use native this.state instead.

Global variables

You can use these three global variables (provided by webpack):

  • IS_JAVASCRIPT : bool - doca provides npm run build:nojs script. You can ship your API docs without JS bundle. This variable is true when nojs flag is used. It gives you opportunity to do some changes in your components (show/hide sections should be visible by default etc.)
  • LAST_MODIFIED : number - Date.now() value, in case you want to display "last modified" information somewhere
  • process.env.NODE_ENV : enum - can be development or production

Styles

You have three options how to style your React components:

  • React inline styles.
  • Link directly your external stylesheet in the Head component.
  • Doca's webpack expects to find folder /styles in your theme. It dynamically imports and processes all css, less and scss files from this folder. Magic! Then, it bundles them into a single css file and passes this.props.cssBundle to your Head component. You can leave this folder empty, then this.props.cssBundle is going to be empty.

Unfortunately, you can't directly import styles from your React components since webpack can't resolve such requires in node_modules.

Publishing

We would be happy to see more open source doca themes! Let us know if you publish some. It should follow this name convention:

doca-XXXXXXXX-theme

Tips

  • Immutable.js is used because resulting app (page) can be pretty big and we want to keep re-rendering fast. All your components should implement shouldComponentUpdate() method, so it prevents unnecessary re-renders. Or you can simply extend your components from react-pure-render.

  • When you're developing a new theme, you can streamline the process by copy&pasting your components into Doca app. That will give you hot-reloading! Otherwise, you can use npm link. With every change, you have to call npm link again, so it triggers npm prepublish and rebuilds your components (babel/JSX -> ES5).

  • npm run lint (use node v4+)

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Doca theme using Twitter Bootstrap

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