element-web-Github/docs/skinning.md
Travis Ralston 9865ce899b Add a bunch of docs
We're making an assumption here that the decorator is actually all over the app when it's not.
2019-12-16 16:34:46 -07:00

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Skinning

The react-sdk can be skinned to replace presentation components, CSS, or other relevant parts of the SDK. Typically consumers will replace entire components and get the ability for custom CSS as a result.

This doc isn't exhaustive on how skinning works, though it should cover some of the more complicated parts such as component replacement.

Loading a skin

  1. Generate a component-index.js (preferably using the tools that the react-sdk exposes). This can typically be done with a npm script like "reskindex -h src/header".
  2. In your app's entry point, add something like this code:
    import {loadSkin} from "matrix-react-sdk";
    loadSkin(import("component-index").components);
    // The rest of your imports go under this.
    
  3. Import the remainder of the SDK and bootstrap your app.

It is extremely important that you do not import anything else from the SDK prior to loading your skin as otherwise the skin might not work. Loading the skin should be one of the first things your app does, if not the very first thing.

Additionally, do not provide loadSkin with the react-sdk components themselves otherwise the app might explode. The SDK is already aware of its components and doesn't need to be told.

Replacing components

Components that replace the react-sdk ones MUST have a replaces static key on the component's class to describe which component it overrides. For example, if your VectorAuthPage component is meant to replace the react-sdk AuthPage component then you'd add static replaces = 'views.auth.AuthPage'; to the VectorAuthPage class.

Other than that, the skin just needs to be loaded normally as mentioned above. Consumers of the SDK likely will not be interested in the rest of this section.

SDK developer notes

Components in the react-sdk MUST be decorated with the @replaceableComponent function. For components that can't use the decorator, they must use a variation that provides similar functionality. The decorator gives consumers an opportunity to load skinned components by abusing import ordering and behaviour.

Decorators are executed at import time which is why we can abuse the import ordering behaviour: importing loadSkin doesn't trigger any components to be imported, allowing the consumer to specify a skin. When the consumer does import a component (for example, MatrixChat), it starts to pull in all the components via import statements. When the components get pulled in the decorator checks with the skinned components to see if it should be replacing the component being imported. The decorator then effectively replaces the components when needed by specifying the skinned component as an override for the SDK's component, which should in theory override critical functions like render() and lifecycle event handlers.

The decorator also means that older usage of getComponent() is no longer required because components should be replaced by the decorator. Eventually the react-sdk should only have one usage of getComponent(): the decorator.

The decorator assumes that if getComponent() returns null that there is no skinned version of the component and continues on using the SDK's component. In previous versions of the SDK, the function would throw an error instead because it also expected the skin to list the SDK's components as well, however that is no longer possible due to the above.

In short, components should always be imported.