mirror of
https://github.com/facebook/react.git
synced 2025-11-01 09:12:30 +00:00
6eb5d67e9c
We should favor outlining a boundary if it contains Suspensey CSS or
Suspensey Images since then we can load that content separately and not
block the main content. This also allows us to animate the reveal.
For example this should be able to animate the reveal even though the
actual HTML content isn't large in this case it's worth outlining so
that the JS runtime can choose to animate this reveal.
```js
<ViewTransition>
<Suspense>
<img src="..." />
</Suspense>
</ViewTransition>
```
For Suspensey Images, in Fizz, we currently only implement the suspensey
semantics when a View Transition is running. Therefore the outlining
only applies if it appears inside a Suspense boundary which might
animate. Otherwise there's no point in outlining. It is also only if the
Suspense boundary itself might animate its appear and not just any
ViewTransition. So the effect is very conservative.
For CSS it applies even without ViewTransition though, since it can help
unblock the main content faster.
react-markup
This package provides the ability to render standalone HTML from Server Components for use in embedded contexts such as e-mails and RSS/Atom feeds. It cannot use Client Components and does not hydrate. It is intended to be paired with the generic React package, which is shipped as react to npm.
Installation
npm install react react-markup
Usage
import { experimental_renderToHTML as renderToHTML } from 'react-markup';
import EmailTemplate from './my-email-template-component.js'
async function action(email, name) {
"use server";
// ... in your server, e.g. a Server Action...
const htmlString = await renderToHTML(<EmailTemplate name={name} />);
// ... send e-mail using some e-mail provider
await sendEmail({ to: email, contentType: 'text/html', body: htmlString });
}
Note that this is an async function that needs to be awaited - unlike the legacy renderToString in react-dom.
API
react-markup
See https://react.dev/reference/react-markup
Thanks
The React team thanks Nikolai Mavrenkov for donating the react-markup package name.