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<Element />

Component

Defines the Node for a given User Element

Reference​

Props​

  • isReact.ElementType
    The User Element to render
  • idString
    Required if the <Element /> is being created inside a User Component
  • canvasboolean
    If true, a Canvas Node will be created.
  • customRecord<string, any>
    Sets the Node's custom properties
  • hiddenboolean
    Sets the Node's hidden property. If true, this will hide the Node
  • ...elementPropsObject
    The props of the element specified in 'is'

Usage​

Configure Nodes in <Frame />​

Since the <Frame /> component creates a Node automatically for all of its children elements, thus the <Element /> component can be used to simply configure the values of the Node that is being created.

import {Craft, Frame, Element} from "@craftjs/core";

const App = () => {
return (
<div>
<h2>My App!</h2>
<Craft resolver={{MyComp}}>
<h2>My Page Editor</h2>
<Frame>
<Element is="div" canvas> // defines the Root Node, droppable
<h2>Drag me around</h2> // Node of type h2, draggable
<MyComp text="You can drag me around too" /> // Node of type MyComp, draggable
<Element is="div" style={{background: "#333" }} canvas> // Canvas Node of type div, draggable and droppable
<p>Same here</p> // Not a Node; not draggable
</Element>
</Element>
</Frame>
</Craft>
</div>
)
}

Defining Linked Nodes​

When used inside a User Component, <Element /> works identically as used inside <Frame /> but because there isn't a Node in-place, thus it has to create a new Linked Node - which is essentially a Node that is linked to the Node of the containing User Component via an arbitary id:

const Hero = () => {
return (
<div>
<h3>I'm a Hero</h3>
<Element id="drop" is={Container} canvas>
<h3>Hi</h3>
</Element>
</div>
)
}

<Element /> used inside User Component must specify an id prop

Examples​

Setting custom properties​

User Components may consume custom properties from their corresponding Node. These properties essentially act like additional props.

Let's say we have a Hero component that has a css custom property and as usual, we set its default values via the craft property.

const Hero = () => {
const { css } = useNode(node => ({
css: node.data.custom.css
}));

return (
<div style={css}>
<h3>I'm a Hero</h3>
<Element id="drop" is={Container} canvas>
<h3>Hi</h3>
</Element>
</div>
)
}

Hero.craft = {
custom: {
css: {
background: "#eee"
}
}
}

Now, if you'd like to actually set these values when you call the component, you can do it like so:

<Frame>
<Element is={Hero} custom={{
css: {
background: "#ddd"
}
}} />
</Frame>