fix notes

This commit is contained in:
Jacky Zhao 2023-08-07 23:57:24 -07:00
parent 533d68e642
commit 09d4eb0684
4 changed files with 22 additions and 17 deletions

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@ -1,4 +1,3 @@
public
node_modules
.quartz-cache
**/*.md

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@ -22,9 +22,11 @@ In effect, components allow you to write a JavaScript function that takes some d
> [!hint]
> For those coming from React, Quartz components are different from React components in that it only uses JSX for templating and layout. Hooks like `useEffect`, `useState`, etc. are not rendered.
## An Example Component
### Constructor
Component files are written in `.tsx` files that live in the `quartz/components` folder. These are re-exported in `quartz/components/index.ts` so you can use them in layouts and other components more easily.
Each component file should have a default export that satisfies the `QuartzComponentConstructor` function signature. It is a function that takes in a single optional parameter `opts` and returns a Quartz Component. The type of the parameters `ops` is defined by the interface `Options` which you as the component creator also decide.
@ -37,7 +39,7 @@ interface Options {
}
const defaultOptions: Options = {
favouriteNumber: 42
favouriteNumber: 42,
}
export default ((userOpts?: Options) => {
@ -55,6 +57,7 @@ export default ((userOpts?: Options) => {
```
### Props
The Quartz component itself (lines 11-17 highlighted above) looks like a React component. It takes in properties (sometimes called [props](https://react.dev/learn/passing-props-to-a-component)) and returns JSX.
All Quartz components accept the same set of props which are defined in `QuartzComponentProps`:
@ -79,6 +82,7 @@ export type QuartzComponentProps = {
- `displayClass`: a utility class that indicates a preference from the user about how to render it in a mobile or desktop setting. Helpful if you want to conditionally hide a component on mobile or desktop.
### Styling
Quartz components can also define a `.css` property on the actual function component which will get picked up by Quartz. This is expected to be a CSS string which can either be inlined or imported from a `.scss` file.
Note that inlined styles **must** be plain vanilla CSS.
@ -116,15 +120,18 @@ export default (() => {
```
> [!warning]
> Quartz does not use CSS modules so any styles you declare here apply *globally*. If you only want it to apply to your component, make sure you use specific class names and selectors.
> Quartz does not use CSS modules so any styles you declare here apply _globally_. If you only want it to apply to your component, make sure you use specific class names and selectors.
### Scripts and Interactivity
- listening for the nav event
- listening for the nav event
- best practice: anything here should unmount any existing event handlers to prevent memory leaks
### Using a Component
#### In a layout
#### In the configuration
#### In a layout
#### In the configuration
> [!hint]
> Look in `quartz/components` for more examples of components in Quartz as reference for your own components!

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@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ type ClientSlug = string & { __brand: "client" }
const slug: ClientSlug = "some random slug"
```
While this prevents most typing mistakes *within* our nominal typing system (e.g. mistaking a server slug for a client slug), it doesn't prevent us from *accidentally* mistaking a string for a client slug when we forcibly cast it.
While this prevents most typing mistakes _within_ our nominal typing system (e.g. mistaking a server slug for a client slug), it doesn't prevent us from _accidentally_ mistaking a string for a client slug when we forcibly cast it.
Thus, we still need to be careful when casting from a string to one of these nominal types in the 'entrypoints', illustrated with hexagon shapes in the diagram below.

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@ -42,7 +42,6 @@ ul,
hyphens: auto;
}
.math {
font-size: 1.1rem;
&.math-display {