mirror of
https://github.com/Foundry376/Mailspring.git
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134 lines
5.3 KiB
CoffeeScript
134 lines
5.3 KiB
CoffeeScript
{shell} = require 'electron'
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GithubStore = require './github-store'
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{React} = require 'nylas-exports'
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{RetinaImg, KeyCommandsRegion} = require 'nylas-component-kit'
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###
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The `ViewOnGithubButton` displays a button whenever there's a relevant
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Github asset to link to.
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When creating this React component the first consideration was when &
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where we'd be rendered. The next consideration was what data we need to
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display.
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Unlike a traditional React application, N1 components have very few
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guarantees on who will render them and where they will be rendered. In our
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`lib/main.cjsx` file we registered this component with our
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{ComponentRegistry} for the `"message:Toolbar"` role. That means that
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whenever the "message:Toolbar" region gets rendered, we'll render
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everything registered with that area. Other buttons, such as "Archive" and
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the "Change Label" button are reigstered with that role, so we should
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expect ourselves to showup alongside them.
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The only data we need is a single relevant to Github. If we have one,
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we'll open it up in a browser. If we don't have one, we'll hide the
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component.
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Getting that url takes a bit of message parsing. We need to retrieve a
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message body then implement some kind of regex to find and parse out that
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link.
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We could have put all of that logic in this React Component, but that's
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not what React components should be doing. In N1 a component's only job is
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to display known data and be the first responders to user interaction.
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We instead create a {GithubStore} to handle the fetching and preparation
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of the data. See that file's documentation for more on how that works.
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As far as this component is concerned, there will be an entity called
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`GitHubStore` that will expose the correct `link`. That store will then
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notify us when the `link` changes so we can update our state.
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Once we know our `link` our `render` method can simply be a description of
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how we want to display that link. In this case we're going to make a
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simple button with a GitHub logo in it.
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We'll also display nothing if there is no link.
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###
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class ViewOnGithubButton extends React.Component
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@displayName: "ViewOnGithubButton"
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@containerRequired: false
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#### React methods ####
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# The following methods are React methods that we override. See {React}
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# documentation for more info
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constructor: (@props) ->
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@state = @_getStateFromStores()
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# When components mount, it's very common to have them listen to a
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# `Store`. Since most of our React Components in N1 are registered into
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# {ComponentRegistry} regions instead of manually rendered top-down much
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# of our data is side-loaded from stores instead of passed in as props.
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componentDidMount: ->
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# The `listen` method of {NylasStore}s (which {GithubStore}
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# subclasses) returns an "unlistener" function. When the unlistener is
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# invoked (as it is in `componentWillUnmount`) the listener references
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# are cleaned up. Every time the `GithubStore` calls its `trigger`
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# method, the `_onStoreChanged` callback will be fired.
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@_unlisten = GithubStore.listen(@_onStoreChanged)
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componentWillUnmount: ->
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@_unlisten?()
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_keymapHandlers: ->
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'github:open': @_openLink
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render: ->
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return null unless @state.link
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<KeyCommandsRegion globalHandlers={@_keymapHandlers()}>
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<button className="btn btn-toolbar"
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onClick={@_openLink}
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title={"Visit Thread on GitHub"}>
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<RetinaImg
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mode={RetinaImg.Mode.ContentIsMask}
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url="nylas://message-view-on-github/assets/github@2x.png" />
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</button>
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</KeyCommandsRegion>
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#### Super common N1 Component private methods ####
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# An extremely common pattern for all N1 components are the methods
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# `onStoreChanged` and `getStateFromStores`.
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#
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# Most N1 components listen to some source of data, which is usally a
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# Store. When the store notifies that something has changed, we need to
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# fetch the fresh data and updated our state.
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#
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# Note that when a Store updates it does not let us know what changed.
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# This is intentional! This forces us to fresh the full latest state
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# from the stores in a more declarative, easy-to-follow way. There are a
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# couple rare exceptions that are only used for performance
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# optimizations.
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# Note that we bind this method to the class instance's `this`. Any
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# method used as a callback must be bound. In Coffeescript we use the
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# fat arrow (`=>`)
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_onStoreChanged: =>
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@setState(@_getStateFromStores())
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# getStateFromStores fetches the data the view needs from the
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# appropriate data source (our GithubStore). We return a basic object
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# that can be passed directly into `setState`.
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_getStateFromStores: ->
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return {link: GithubStore.link()}
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#### Other utility "private" methods ####
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# This responds to user interaction. Since it's a callback we have to
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# bind it to the instances's `this` (Coffeescript fat arrow `=>`)
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#
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# In the case of this component we use the Electron `shell` module to
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# request the computer to open the default browser.
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#
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# In other very common cases, user interaction handlers may fire an
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# `Action` across the system for other Stores to respond to. They may
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# also queue a {Task} to eventually perform a mutating API POST or PUT
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# request.
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_openLink: =>
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shell.openExternal(@state.link) if @state.link
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module.exports = ViewOnGithubButton
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