object-editor-react
is a visual editor for structured JSON data, available as a simple drop-in React component.
- 🔌 Drop-in, structured editing of deeply nested JSON objects
- ⚛️ Schema aware: create nested objects and array elements in real time
- 🏗 Bulk operations for working with larger objects
- Create a
Schema
-- it can be as deeply nested as you need.
import { SchemaTypes } from 'object-editor-react';
const schema = {
foo: SchemaTypes.string({ required: true }),
bar: {
baz: SchemaTypes.arrayOf({
nested: SchemaTypes.string(),
}),
},
}
- Drop in an
ObjectEditor
orArrayEditor
and provide modification handlers.
import { ArrayEditor, ObjectEditor } from 'object-editor-react';
const YourComponent = props => {
return (
<ArrayEditor
type={schema}
object={[{ foo: 'bar' }, { foo: 'baz' }]}
onUpdateElement={(el, index) => ...}
onAddElement={(newElement) => ...}
onAddElement={(removedElement, index) => ...}
/>
);
}
A table-based editor is generated based on the Schema
. For properties
with types like string and number, you can just edit the values directly
using an <input />
element.
For more complex properties (object, array, or other complex types), an "Edit" button in the cell creates a nested Editor (type chosen automatically) for editing the nested object.
npm i object-editor-react
To use object-editor-react
, just create a schema and provide object modification handlers.
It's similar to using a controlled <input />
element.
There are many different SchemaTypes
that can be combined and nested however you need.
They are similar to React
PropTypes.
A valid schema is either:
- An object whose leaves are
SchemaTypes
- A
SchemaType
Examples:
import { SchemaTypes } from 'object-editor-react';
const schema = {
foo: SchemaTypes.string({ required: true }),
bar: {
baz: SchemaTypes.any(),
}
};
// Some valid instances:
// { foo: 'bar' }
// { foo: 'bar', bar: { baz: [] } }
const schema = SchemaTypes.arrayOf(SchemaTypes.string())();
// Some valid instances:
// [ 'one', 'two', 'three' ],
// [ ]
const schema = {
foo: SchemaTypes.arrayOf({
bar: SchemaTypes.array()
})({ required: true }),
};
// Some valid instances:
// { foo: [ { bar: [] } ] }
// { foo: [] }
The value can be any non-undefined
value.
The value must have a type other than undefined
.
The value must have type string
.
The value must have type boolean
.
The value must have type function
.
The value must have type number
.
The value must be a Date
instance with a non-NaN
time.
Specifically, Object.toString()
must return "[object Date]"
, and date.getTime()
must be non-NaN
.
The value must be an Array
instance.
Specifically, Array.isArray()
must return true
.
The value must have type object
.
The value must be an array
whose elements all conform to a specific SchemaType
.
Specifically, the value must pass the SchemaTypes.array
validation test, and each
element of the array must pass the validation test of the SchemaType
passed
as the argument to arrayOf
.
Each SchemaType
is a function. Every SchemaType
except for arrayOf
takes a single, optional configuration object as its parameter.
These are the possible configuration options.
Key | Note | Required? | Default |
---|---|---|---|
required |
is the key corresponding to this SchemaType required? |
false |
false |
In the case of arrayOf
, the arrayOf
function takes a schema as its
only parameters and returns a function that accepts a configuration object.
Example:
const schema = SchemaTypes.arrayOf({
foo: SchemaTypes.string()
})({ required: false });
There are two top-level Editor components: ObjectEditor
and ArrayEditor
.
Both Editor types are "controlled" components: any changes to the objects are passed to a change handler, but the Editors themselves don't have internal state to track changes.
An Editor for editing a single JSON
object.
import { ObjectEditor } from 'object-editor-react';
props
Prop | Type | Note | Required? | Default |
---|---|---|---|---|
type |
Schema |
The Schema to use when generating the Editor and validating objects. Must be a valid Schema (an object whose keys are SchemaType:s , or a SchemaType ) |
true |
|
object |
any |
the object to edit. must validate according to the Schema passed in the type prop. |
false |
|
onUpdateElement |
function |
function onUpdateElement (updatedElement: Object ) -> void . Handler called when the object is updated |
true |
|
className |
string |
any additional class names for the editor table wrapper | false |
|
icon |
function |
a function that returns an icon to use for each row in the table | false |
no icon used |
An Editor for editing an array of objects, where each element in the array conforms to a Schema
.
import { ArrayEditor } from 'object-editor-react';
props
Prop | Type | Note | Required? | Default |
---|---|---|---|---|
type |
Schema |
The Schema to use when generating the Editor and validating objects. Each element in the array must conform to this Schema . Must be a valid Schema (an object whose keys are SchemaType:s , or a SchemaType ) |
true |
|
object |
any |
The array to edit. Each element must validate according to the Schema passed in the type prop. |
false |
|
onUpdateElement |
function |
function onUpdateElement (updatedElement: Object, updatedIndex: Number) -> void Handler called when an element in the array is updated The updated element and the index are passed |
true |
|
onAddElement |
function |
function onAddElement (newElement: Object) -> boolean Handler called when a new element is added to the array If this function returns true, the "add object" row is cleared |
true |
|
onRemoveElements |
function |
function onRemoveElements (removedIndices: [Number]) -> void Handler called when an element in the array is removed The indices of removed elements are passed |
true |
|
className |
string |
any additional class names for the editor table wrapper | false |
|
icon |
function |
a function that returns an icon to use for each row in the table | false |
no icon used |
See examples/example.js
for a stateful implementation with a deeply nested Schema
.
$ git clone https://github.com/b-gran/object-editor-react.git
$ cd object-editor-react
$ npm install
$ npm start
✔ Development server running on: http://localhost:5000
✔ Build completed
There are two development examples hosted on the dev server:
- http://localhost:5000/mainExample.html contains schemas with all root value types
- http://localhost:5000/githubExample.html is the example hosted on GitHub
$ npm run test