Warning
This guide assumes you have experience writing JavaScript and are familiar with TypeScript.
Normally on the web, we write layout code using HTML which looks something like the following:
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 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 complaints and invented the concept of Components — JavaScript functions that return JSX — 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.
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’s a function that takes in a single optional parameter opts
and returns a Quartz Component. The type of the parameters opts
is defined by the interface Options
which you as the component creator also decide.
In your component, you can use the values from the configuration option to change the rendering behaviour inside of your component. For example, the component in the code snippet below will not render if the favouriteNumber
option is below 0.
Props
The Quartz component itself (lines 11-17 highlighted above) looks like a React component. It takes in properties (sometimes called props) and returns JSX.
All Quartz components accept the same set of props:
fileData
: Any metadata plugins may have added to the current page.fileData.slug
: slug of the current page.fileData.frontmatter
: any frontmatter parsed.
cfg
: Theconfiguration
field inquartz.config.ts
.tree
: the resulting HTML AST after processing and transforming the file. This is useful if you’d like to render the content using hast-util-to-jsx-runtime (you can find an example of this inquartz/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:
Imported styles, however, can be from SCSS files:
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.
Scripts and Interactivity
What about interactivity? Suppose you want to add an-click handler for example. Like the .css
property on the component, you can also declare .beforeDOMLoaded
and .afterDOMLoaded
properties that are strings that contain the script.
Tip
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 likeonClick
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.
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).
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.
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
After creating your custom component, re-export it in quartz/components/index.ts
:
Then, you can use it like any other component in quartz.layout.ts
via Component.YourComponent()
. See the layout section for more details.
As Quartz components are just functions that return React components, you can compositionally use them in other Quartz components.
Tip
Look in
quartz/components
for more examples of components in Quartz as reference for your own components!