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Build a React App
React is the most widely used JavaScript frontend library.
In this tutorial we'll build a simple React app with Deno. The app will display a list of dinosaurs. When you click on one, it'll take you to a dinosaur page with more details. You can see the finished app repo on GitHub
Create a React app with Vite and Deno Jump to heading
This tutorial will use Vite to quickly scaffold a Deno and React app. Vite is a build tool and development server for modern web projects. It pairs well with React and Deno, leveraging ES modules and allowing you to import React components directly.
In your terminal run the following command to create a new React app with Vite using the typescript template:
deno run -A npm:create-vite@latest --template react-ts
When prompted, give your app a name, and cd
into the newly created project
directory. Then run the following command to install the dependencies:
deno install
Now you can serve your new react app by running:
deno task dev
This will start the Vite server, click the output link to localhost to see your app in the browser.
Add a backend Jump to heading
The next step is to add a backend API. We'll create a very simple API that returns information about dinosaurs.
In the root of your new project, create an api
folder. In that folder, create
a main.ts
file, which will run the server, and a data.json
, which will
contain the hard coded dinosaur data.
Copy and paste
this json file
into the api/data.json
file.
We're going to build out a simple API server with routes that return dinosaur
information. We'll use the oak
middleware framework
and the cors
middleware to enable
CORS.
Use the deno add
command to add the required dependencies to your project:
deno add jsr:@oak/oak jsr:@tajpouria/cors
Next, update api/main.ts
to import the required modules and create a new
Router
instance to define some routes:
import { Application, Router } from "@oak/oak";
import { oakCors } from "@tajpouria/cors";
import data from "./data.json" with { type: "json" };
const router = new Router();
After this, in the same file, we'll define two routes. One at /api/dinosaurs
to return all the dinosaurs, and /api/dinosaurs/:dinosaur
to return a specific
dinosaur based on the name in the URL:
router.get("/api/dinosaurs", (context) => {
context.response.body = data;
});
router.get("/api/dinosaurs/:dinosaur", (context) => {
if (!context?.params?.dinosaur) {
context.response.body = "No dinosaur name provided.";
}
const dinosaur = data.find((item) =>
item.name.toLowerCase() === context.params.dinosaur.toLowerCase()
);
context.response.body = dinosaur ?? "No dinosaur found.";
});
Finally, at the bottom of the same file, create a new Application
instance and
attach the routes we just defined to the application using
app.use(router.routes())
and start the server listening on port 8000:
const app = new Application();
app.use(oakCors());
app.use(router.routes());
app.use(router.allowedMethods());
await app.listen({ port: 8000 });
You can run the API server with deno run --allow-env --allow-net api/main.ts
.
We'll create a task to run this command in the background and update the dev
task to run both the React app and the API server.
In your package.json
file, update the scripts
field to include the
following:
{
"scripts": {
"dev": "deno task dev:api & deno task dev:vite",
"dev:api": "deno run --allow-env --allow-net api/main.ts",
"dev:vite": "deno run -A npm:vite",
// ...
}
If you run deno task dev
now and visit localhost:8000/api/dinosaurs
, in your
browser you should see a JSON response of all of the dinosaurs.
Update the entrypoint Jump to heading
The entrypoint for the React app is in the src/main.tsx
file. Ours is going to
be very basic:
import ReactDOM from "react-dom/client";
import App from "./App";
import "./index.css";
ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById("root") as HTMLElement).render(
<App />,
);
Add a router Jump to heading
The app will have two routes: /
and /:dinosaur
.
We'll use react-router-dom
to build out
some routing logic, so we'll need to add the react-router-dom
dependency to
your project. In the project root run:
deno add npm:react-router-dom
Update the /src/App.tsx
file to import and use the
BrowserRouter
component from react-router-dom
and define the two routes:
import { BrowserRouter, Route, Routes } from "react-router-dom";
import Index from "./pages/index";
import Dinosaur from "./pages/Dinosaur";
import "./App.css";
function App() {
return (
<BrowserRouter>
<Routes>
<Route path="/" element={<Index />} />
<Route path="/:selectedDinosaur" element={<Dinosaur />} />
</Routes>
</BrowserRouter>
);
}
export default App;
Proxy to forward the api requests Jump to heading
Vite will be serving the application on port 5173
while our api is running on
port 8000
. Therefore, we'll need to set up a proxy to allow the api/
-paths
to get to be reachable by the router. Overwrite vite.config.ts
with the
following to configure a proxy:
import { defineConfig } from "vite";
import react from "@vitejs/plugin-react";
export default defineConfig({
plugins: [react()],
server: {
proxy: {
"/api": {
target: "http://localhost:8000",
changeOrigin: true,
},
},
},
});
Create the pages Jump to heading
We'll create two pages: Index
and Dinosaur
. The Index
page will list all
the dinosaurs and the Dinosaur
page will show details of a specific dinosaur.
Create a pages
folder in the src
directory and inside that create two files:
index.tsx
and Dinosaur.tsx
.
Types Jump to heading
Both pages will use the Dino
type to describe the shape of data they're
expecting from the API, so let's create a types.ts
file in the src
directory:
export type Dino = { name: string; description: string };
index.tsx Jump to heading
This page will fetch the list of dinosaurs from the API and render them as links:
import { useEffect, useState } from "react";
import { Link } from "react-router-dom";
import { Dino } from "../types.ts";
export default function Index() {
const [dinosaurs, setDinosaurs] = useState<Dino[]>([]);
useEffect(() => {
(async () => {
const response = await fetch(`/api/dinosaurs/`);
const allDinosaurs = await response.json() as Dino[];
setDinosaurs(allDinosaurs);
})();
}, []);
return (
<main>
<h1>Welcome to the Dinosaur app</h1>
<p>Click on a dinosaur below to learn more.</p>
{dinosaurs.map((dinosaur: Dino) => {
return (
<Link
to={`/${dinosaur.name.toLowerCase()}`}
key={dinosaur.name}
className="dinosaur"
>
{dinosaur.name}
</Link>
);
})}
</main>
);
}
Dinosaur.tsx Jump to heading
This page will fetch the details of a specific dinosaur from the API and render it in a paragraph:
import { useEffect, useState } from "react";
import { Link, useParams } from "react-router-dom";
import { Dino } from "../types";
export default function Dinosaur() {
const { selectedDinosaur } = useParams();
const [dinosaur, setDino] = useState<Dino>({ name: "", description: "" });
useEffect(() => {
(async () => {
const resp = await fetch(`/api/dinosaurs/${selectedDinosaur}`);
const dino = await resp.json() as Dino;
setDino(dino);
})();
}, [selectedDinosaur]);
return (
<div>
<h1>{dinosaur.name}</h1>
<p>{dinosaur.description}</p>
<Link to="/">ðŸ Back to all dinosaurs</Link>
</div>
);
}
Styling the list of dinosaurs Jump to heading
Since we are displaying the list of dinosaurs on the main page, let's do som
basic formatting. Add the following to the bottom of src/App.css
to display
our list of dinosaurs in an orderly fashion:
.dinosaur {
display: block;
}
Run the app Jump to heading
To run the app use the task you set up earlier
deno task dev
Navigate to the local Vite server in your browser (localhost:5173
) and you
should see the list of dinosaurs displayed which you can click through to find
out about each one.
Build and deploy Jump to heading
At this point the app is being served by the Vite development server. To serve
the app in production, you can build the app with Vite and then serve the built
files with Deno. To do so we'll need to update the api server to serve the built
files. We'll write some middleware to do this. In your api
directory create a
new file called routeStaticFilesFrom.ts
and add the following code:
import { Next } from "jsr:@oak/oak/middleware";
import { Context } from "jsr:@oak/oak/context";
// Configure static site routes so that we can serve
// the Vite build output and the public folder
export default function routeStaticFilesFrom(staticPaths: string[]) {
return async (context: Context<Record<string, object>>, next: Next) => {
for (const path of staticPaths) {
try {
await context.send({ root: path, index: "index.html" });
return;
} catch {
continue;
}
}
await next();
};
}
This middleware will attempt to serve the static files from the paths provided
in the staticPaths
array. If the file is not found it will call the next
middleware in the chain. We can now update the api/main.ts
file to use this
middleware:
import { Application, Router } from "@oak/oak";
import { oakCors } from "@tajpouria/cors";
import data from "./data.json" with { type: "json" };
import routeStaticFilesFrom from "./util/routeStaticFilesFrom.ts";
const router = new Router();
router.get("/api/dinosaurs", (context) => {
context.response.body = data;
});
router.get("/api/dinosaurs/:dinosaur", (context) => {
if (!context?.params?.dinosaur) {
context.response.body = "No dinosaur name provided.";
}
const dinosaur = data.find((item) =>
item.name.toLowerCase() === context.params.dinosaur.toLowerCase()
);
context.response.body = dinosaur ? dinosaur : "No dinosaur found.";
});
const app = new Application();
app.use(oakCors());
app.use(router.routes());
app.use(router.allowedMethods());
app.use(routeStaticFilesFrom([
`${Deno.cwd()}/dist`,
`${Deno.cwd()}/public`,
]));
await app.listen({ port: 8000 });
Add a serve
script to your package.json
file to build the app with Vite and
then run the API server:
{
"scripts": {
// ...
"serve": "deno task build && deno task dev:api",
}
Now you can serve the built app with Deno by running:
deno task serve
If you visit localhost:8000
in your browser you should see the app running!
🦕 Now you can scaffold and develop a React app with Vite and Deno! You’re ready to build blazing-fast web applications. We hope you enjoy exploring these cutting-edge tools, we can't wait to see what you make!
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