2.0 KiB
title | layout | author |
---|---|---|
Use React and JSX in Python Applications | post | Kunal Mehta |
Today we're happy to announce the initial release of PyReact, which makes it easier to use React and JSX in your Python applications. It's designed to provide an API to transform your JSX files into JavaScript, as well as provide access to the latest React source files.
Usage
Transform your JSX files via the provided jsx
module:
from react import jsx
# For multiple paths, use the JSXTransformer class.
transformer = jsx.JSXTransformer()
for jsx_path, js_path in my_paths:
transformer.transform(jsx_path, js_path)
# For a single file, you can use a shortcut method.
jsx.transform('path/to/input/file.jsx', 'path/to/output/file.js')
For full paths to React files, use the source
module:
from react import source
# path_for raises IOError if the file doesn't exist.
react_js = source.path_for('react.min.js')
Django
PyReact includes a JSX compiler for django-pipeline. Add it to your project's pipeline settings like this:
PIPELINE_COMPILERS = (
'react.utils.pipeline.JSXCompiler',
)
Installation
PyReact is hosted on PyPI, and can be installed with pip
:
$ pip install PyReact
Alternatively, add it into your requirements
file:
PyReact==0.1.1
Dependencies: PyReact uses PyExecJS to execute the bundled React code, which requires that a JS runtime environment is installed on your machine. We don't explicitly set a dependency on a runtime environment; Mac OS X comes bundled with one. If you're on a different platform, we recommend PyV8.
For the initial release, we've only tested on Python 2.7. Look out for support for Python 3 in the future, and if you see anything that can be improved, we welcome your contributions!