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Project using use React + React Router + GitHub API for DecodeMTL

Home Page: https://www.decodemtl.com

JavaScript 73.20% CSS 14.84% HTML 11.95%

react-github-api-project's Introduction

React + GitHub API project

In this project, we're going to take a small, existing React application and add new features to it.

Here's what the application will look like once you are done:

react github project

The code you are given for the project implements the search form and the loading of basic user info. You'll have to do all the rest.

Let's take a look at the code that's already there. Many of the starter files should already be familiar to you if you completed the previous workshop.

  • package.json: Configuration file for NPM, contains dependencies and project metadata
  • .gitignore: Files that should be ignored by Git. node_modules can always be regenerated
  • public/index.html: File that gets served thru Webpack after having been filled in
  • src/index.js: This file is the entry point for the app. It puts our app on the screen!
  • src/components/*: All the components of our application.
  • src/index.css: The styles for our app. Check it out to see how your starter app is being styled, and add to it to complete the project. Notice that we don't <link> this CSS from the index? How does this work?? Make sure you understand!!!

To get started coding on this project, remember the following steps:

  1. npm install the first time you clone this repo
  2. npm start anytime you want to start developing. This will watch your JS files and re-run webpack when there are changes
  3. Start coding!

In index.js we have the following route structure:

<Route path="/" component={App}>
  <IndexRoute component={Search}/>
  <Route path="user/:username" component={User}/>
</Route>

The top route says to load the App component. Looking at the code of App.jsx, you'll see that its render method outputs {this.props.children}. If the URL happens to be only /, then React Router will render an <App/> instance, and will pass it a <Search/> as its child. If the route happens to be /user/:username, React Router will display <App/> but will pass it <User /> as a child.

When the Search component is displayed, it has a form and a button. When the form is submitted, we use React Router's browserHistory to programmatically change the URL. Look at the Search's _handleSubmit method to see how that happens.

Once we navigate to the new URL, React Router will render a User component. Looking at the componentDidMount method of the User, you'll see that it does an AJAX call using this.props.params.username. The reason why it has access to this prop is because the Router passed it when it mounted the component.

The AJAX call is made to https://api.github.com/users/{USERNAME} and returns the following information:

{
  "login": "gaearon",
  "id": 810438,
  "avatar_url": "https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/810438?v=3",
  "gravatar_id": "",
  "url": "https://api.github.com/users/gaearon",
  "html_url": "https://github.com/gaearon",
  "followers_url": "https://api.github.com/users/gaearon/followers",
  "following_url": "https://api.github.com/users/gaearon/following{/other_user}",
  "gists_url": "https://api.github.com/users/gaearon/gists{/gist_id}",
  "starred_url": "https://api.github.com/users/gaearon/starred{/owner}{/repo}",
  "subscriptions_url": "https://api.github.com/users/gaearon/subscriptions",
  "organizations_url": "https://api.github.com/users/gaearon/orgs",
  "repos_url": "https://api.github.com/users/gaearon/repos",
  "events_url": "https://api.github.com/users/gaearon/events{/privacy}",
  "received_events_url": "https://api.github.com/users/gaearon/received_events",
  "type": "User",
  "site_admin": false,
  "name": "Dan Abramov",
  "company": "Facebook",
  "blog": "http://twitter.com/dan_abramov",
  "location": "London, UK",
  "email": "[email protected]",
  "hireable": null,
  "bio": "Created: Redux, React Hot Loader, React DnD. Now helping make @reactjs better at @facebook.",
  "public_repos": 176,
  "public_gists": 48,
  "followers": 10338,
  "following": 171,
  "created_at": "2011-05-25T18:18:31Z",
  "updated_at": "2016-07-28T14:41:02Z"
}

GitHub API documentation for Users

In the render method of the User component, we are displaying the user info based on the received result, and we have three links that don't lead anywhere for the moment:

links

If you click on followers, notice that the URL of the page changes to /users/:username/followers. If you have your dev tools open, React Router will give you an error message telling you that this route does not exist.

The goal of this workshop is to implement the three links above. To do this, we'll start by implementing the followers page together with step by step instructions. Then, your job will be to implement the two remaining screens and fix any bugs.

Implementing the Followers page

When clicking on the followers link in the UI, notice that the URL changes to /user/:username/followers. Currently this results in a "not found" route. Let's fix this.

followers page

Step 1: adding the route

In index.js, you currently have your user route setup like this:

<Route path="user/:username" component={User} />

Let's change it to a route with a nested route

<Route path="user/:username" component={User}>
  <Route path="followers" component={Followers} />
</Route>

For this to do anything, we first have to implement the Followers component.

Step 2: adding the Followers component

Create a component called Followers. Since this component is also a route component, it will receive the same this.props.params.username. In this component, we're eventually going to do an AJAX call to grab the followers of the user.

For the moment, create the component only with a render function. In there, use your props to return the following:

<div className="followers-page">
  <h3>Followers of USERNAME</h3>
</div>

Step 3: displaying the nested component inside its parent

When the URL changes to followers, we want to display the followers alongside the current User component. This is why we are nesting the followers route inside the user route.

To reflect this nesting in our tree of components, we have to add a {this.props.children} output to our User component.

Modify the User component to make it display its children just before the closing </div> in the render method.

When this is done, go back to your browser. Search for a user, and click on FOLLOWERS. The followers component should be displayed below the user info.

Step 4: loading GitHub data in the Followers component:

We want to load the followers of the current user as soon as the Followers component is mounted in the DOM. In the componentDidMount of Followers, use fetch to make a request to GitHub's API for the followers. Simply add /followers to the GitHub API URL for the user e.g. https://api.github.com/users/ziad-saab/followers

In the callback to your AJAX request, use setState to set a followers state on your component.

Step 5: displaying the followers data in the Followers component:

Using the this.state.followers in your render method, display the followers that you receive from GitHub. We'll do this in a few steps.

  1. Create a new pure component called GithubUser. It should receive a user prop, and use its avatar_url and login properties to display one GitHub user. The whole display should link back to that user's page in your app, using React Router's Link component. Here's what a sample output of your GithubUser component should look like:
<Link to="/user/ziad-saab">
  <img src="AVATAR URL"/>
  ziad-saab
</Link>

And here's a visual example of four GithubUser instances (you can use vertical-align in your CSS to align the image and the name):

GithubUser component

  1. In Followers, import your GithubUser component.
  2. In the render method of Followers, use map to take the array at this.state.followers, and map it to an array of <GithubUser /> elements, passing the user prop. The code of Followers' render method should look like this:
if (!this.state.followers) {
return <div>LOADING FOLLOWERS...</div>
}

return (
<div className="followers-page">
    <h2>Followers of {this.props.params.username}</h2>
    <ul>
        {this.state.followers.map(/* INSERT CODE HERE TO RETURN A NEW <GithubUser/> */)}
    </ul>
</div>
);

Having done this, you should have a full Followers component ready to go.

Step 6: ⚠️ A wild bug has appeared!

Try to click on a follower in the followers list. Notice that the URL changes to match the user you clicked, but the display does not change to reflect that. We had the same problem in the previous workshop. If you recall, it was due to us fetching the data in componentDidMount, but sometimes a component's props change while it's still mounted.

Here's what's happening in this case:

  1. User is on / and does a search for "gaearon"
  2. User gets redirected to /user/gaearon and React Router mounts an instance of the User component, passing it "gaearon" as this.props.params.username. The User component's componentDidMount method kicks in and fetches data with AJAX
  3. User clicks on FOLLOWERS, gets redirected to /users/gaearon/followers. React Router keeps the instance of User mounted, and passes it a new instance of Followers as this.props.children. The Followers instance is mounted and its componentDidMount kicks in, fetching the followers data.
  4. User clicks on one follower called "alexkuz" and the URL changes to /users/alexkuz. React Router does not mount a new User instance. Instead, it changes the params prop of the existing User instance to make it {username: "alexkuz"}.
  5. Since componentDidMount of User is not called, no AJAX call occurs.

To fix this bug, follow the same instructions you did in yesterday's workshop:

  1. Move the logic from componentDidMount to another method called fetchData
  2. Call fetchData from componentDidMount
  3. Implement componentDidUpdate and call fetchData again but conditionally, only if the username prop has changed.

⚠️ componentDidUpdate gets called frequently, whether the props or the state changed. That's why it's important to always check the new vs. old state/props before calling setState again.

Implementing the following page

Implementing the following page is an exact copy of the followers page. The only differences are:

  1. Use /following instead of /followers in your AJAX call
  2. The title of the page and its URL will be different

When displaying the following list, note that you can -- and should -- reuse the same GithubUser presentational component.

following page

Implementing the repos page

Implementing the repos page is similar to the other two pages you implemented. The only differences are:

  1. Use /repos in your AJAX call
  2. Title and URL are different
  3. Instead of using a <Link> element to link to the repo, use a regular <a href> since you're linking to an external resource.
  4. You'll need a new GithubRepo component that will act similar to the GithubUser component you used to display the followers/following.

repos page

When you finish everything, your end-result should look and behave like this:

react github project

Challenge: infinite scrolling!

⚠️ If you're going to do this challenge, I suggest you start it in a separate branch and commit often. This way you always have somewhere to go back to when "things were working".

For this challenge, we're going to use the react-infinite component to load extra data from the GitHub API.

Right now, if you look at a profile with a lot of followers, you'll notice that GitHub API only returns the first 25 followers. The API has a per_page query string parameter that you can set, but the maximum number of items per page is still 100. If someone has more than 100 followers, you'd have to do many requests to get all of them.

React Infinite will take care of most of the heavy lifting for us. First of all, it's never a good idea to have thousands of elements on the page if the user is only seeing a handful. React Infinite will be efficient in showing only the elements that are in the viewport. Second, React Infinite will detect the scroll position and can fire off a callback when the scrolling reaches the edge of your container.

All you have to do is provide React Infinite with the callback function that will load your data, and pass your items to the <Infinite> component.

Let's do it step by step for followers and then you can reproduce it for the other pages. This is what your app will look like once you are done:

infinite scroll

Step 0: 👓 reading the documentation!

Read the documentation for React Infinite to get an idea of what's going on. Once you have read the documentation, make sure to install the react-infinite package from NPM.

Step 1: modifying the Followers component

Your Followers component currently loads its data on componentDidMount. It turns out that if you mount an <Infinite> component without any data, it will automatically call your callback function to fetch more data.

Step 1.1: Adding new state data to Followers

In the constructor method of Followers, let's add a few more pieces of state. Let's add a page state and initialize it to 1. Add another state called loading and set it to false. Finally, add a followers state and set it to an empty array.

Step 1.2: Change the componentDidMount method name to fetchData. In your AJAX call, add two query string parameters to the GitHub API URL: page will come from your state, and per_page can be set to anything between 1 and 100. Set it to 50. Your URL should look like this:

https://api.github.com/users/USER/followers?access_token=XXX&page=1&per_page=50

Step 1.3: Loading...

Before doing the AJAX call in fetchData, set the loading state to true.

Step 1.4: Change the callback to the AJAX call

In the callback of the AJAX call, you're currently setting the followers state to the response you receive from the GitHub server. Instead, since you already have a followers array, use the concat method to add the new items to your existing this.state.followers array. Additionally, set the loading state to false, and the page state to whatever it currently is + 1.

Step 1.5: Importing the library

Load react-infinite in your Followers component, and assign it to the variable Infinite.

Step 1.6: Change the render method

In the render method, we're currently checking if this.state.followers is truthy. We don't need to do that anymore, because we'll always have a list of followers.

Replace your container with an <Infinite> container, and pass it the following props:

  • isInfiniteLoading: take it from your loading state
  • onInfiniteLoad: point to your fetchData method
  • useWindowAsScrollContainer: this prop doesn't have a value! It will be set to true automatically
  • elementHeight: to scroll efficiently, React Infinite needs to know the height of an element. Use your browser's inspector to find the approximate height of your GithubUser elements. It's not perfect, but it'll do for now.
  • infiniteLoadBeginEdgeOffset: this sets the amount of pixels from the edge of your container at which more data will be loaded. Set it to 100 so that the data starts loading before you reach the edge (bottom) of the window.

Your render code should have the following in it now:

<Infinite ...all the props...>
  {this.state.followers.map(...)}
</Infinite>

After you've done all these changes, your infinite scroll should be working. React Infinite will call your fetchData method as often as needed to display new elements. Every time a new page is fetched, you're incrementing the page state so that future page fetches will fetch the next page. Since you're concating followers, your list will keep growing until there is no more data.

Optional step: adding a loading indicator

React Infinite lets you use a loadingSpinnerDelegate. It's basically a React element that will be displayed below the list when loading is true.

You can do this as simply as loadingSpinnerDelegate={<div>LOADING</div>} or you can go for a CSS animation, or even a GIF.

Finally

When you are done, make sure to add infinite scrolling to the following and repos pages. They should work exactly the same way :)

react-github-api-project's People

Contributors

ziad-saab avatar

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