You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
 
 
 
 
Paul O’Shannessy 60977d1fa7 Update website for 15.3.1 8 years ago
_css switched to codemirror's jsx mode (#6898) 9 years ago
_data Add Design Principles to the docs (#7282) 8 years ago
_includes Add Design Principles to the docs (#7282) 8 years ago
_js [Docs] Error Decoder Page (#6946) 9 years ago
_layouts Finish Jekyll 3 Upgrade 8 years ago
_plugins Fix header link generation for non-English docs (#7497) 8 years ago
_posts Fix link formatting on Relay blog post (#7434) 8 years ago
blog [docs] Don't make authors links on all posts page 9 years ago
contributing Finish Jekyll 3 Upgrade 8 years ago
css New marketing copy on homepage (#7012) 8 years ago
docs Fix header link generation for non-English docs (#7497) 8 years ago
downloads Update website for 15.3.1 8 years ago
img [docs] Use appropriately sized og:image (#7417) 8 years ago
js Update website for 15.3.1 8 years ago
tips Upgrade to Jekyll 3 8 years ago
warnings [docs] Add permalink to PropTypes warning page (#7377) 8 years ago
404.md Finish Jekyll 3 Upgrade 8 years ago
Gemfile Upgrade to Jekyll 3 8 years ago
Gemfile.lock Finish Jekyll 3 Upgrade 8 years ago
README.md added instruction for downloading babel-browser (#6960) 9 years ago
Rakefile [Docs] Error Decoder Page (#6946) 9 years ago
_config.yml Update website for 15.3.1 8 years ago
acknowledgements.md Finish Jekyll 3 Upgrade 8 years ago
downloads.md [docs] Use npmcdn (#7394) 8 years ago
favicon.ico Initial public release 12 years ago
feed.xml Finish Jekyll 3 Upgrade 8 years ago
html-jsx.html [docs] Use existing layout for redirecting html-jsx (#6904) 9 years ago
index.md Wordsmith the homepage (#7022) 8 years ago
jsx-compiler.md Finish Jekyll 3 Upgrade 8 years ago
support.md Finish Jekyll 3 Upgrade 8 years ago

README.md

React Documentation & Website

We use Jekyll to build the site using (mostly) Markdown, and we host it by pushing HTML to GitHub Pages.

Installation

If you are working on the site, you will want to install and run a local copy of it.

Dependencies

In order to use Jekyll, you will need to have Ruby installed.

Mac OS X comes pre-installed with Ruby, but you may need to update RubyGems (via gem update --system). Otherwise, RVM and rbenv are popular ways to install Ruby. Once you have RubyGems and installed Bundler (via gem install bundler), use it to install the dependencies:

$ cd react/docs
$ bundle install # Might need sudo.
$ npm install

Instructions

The site requires React, so first make sure you've built the project (via grunt).

Use Jekyll to serve the website locally (by default, at http://localhost:4000):

$ cd react/docs
$ bundle exec rake
$ bundle exec rake fetch_remotes
$ bundle exec jekyll serve -w
$ open http://localhost:4000/react/

We use SASS (with Bourbon) for our CSS, and we use JSX to transform some of our JS. If you only want to modify the HTML or Markdown, you do not have to do anything because we package pre-compiled copies of the CSS and JS. If you want to modify the CSS or JS, use Rake to compile them:

$ cd react/docs
$ bundle exec rake watch # Automatically compiles as needed.
# bundle exec rake         Manually compile CSS and JS.
# bundle exec rake js      Manually compile JS, only.

Afterthoughts

Updating facebook.github.io/react

The easiest way to do this is to have a separate clone of this repository, checked out to the gh-pages branch. We have a build step that expects this to be in a directory named react-gh-pages at the same depth as react. Then it's just a matter of running grunt docs, which will compile the site and copy it out to this repository. From there, you can check it in.

Note: This should only be done for new releases. You should create a tag corresponding to the release tag in the main repository.

We also have a rake task that does the same thing (without creating commits). It expects the directory structure mentioned above.

$ bundle exec rake release

Removing the Jekyll / Ruby Dependency

In an ideal world, we would not be adding a Ruby dependency on part of our project. We would like to move towards a point where we are using React to render the website.