Docusaurus Client API
Docusaurus provides some APIs on the clients that can be helpful to you when building your site.
Components
<ErrorBoundary />
This component creates a React error boundary.
Use it to wrap components that might throw, and display a fallback when that happens instead of crashing the whole app.
import React from 'react';
import ErrorBoundary from '@docusaurus/ErrorBoundary';
const SafeComponent = () => (
<ErrorBoundary
fallback={({error, tryAgain}) => (
<div>
<p>This component crashed because of error: {error.message}.</p>
<button onClick={tryAgain}>Try Again!</button>
</div>
)}>
<SomeDangerousComponentThatMayThrow />
</ErrorBoundary>
);
To see it in action, click here:
Docusaurus uses this component to catch errors within the theme's layout, and also within the entire app.
This component doesn't catch build-time errors and only protects against client-side render errors that can happen when using stateful React components.
Props
fallback
: an optional render callback returning a JSX element. It will receive an object with 2 attributes:error
, the error that was caught, andtryAgain
, a function (() => void
) callback to reset the error in the component and try rendering it again. If not present,@theme/Error
will be rendered instead.@theme/Error
is used for the error boundaries wrapping the site, above the layout.
The fallback
prop is a callback, and not a React functional component. You can't use React hooks inside this callback.
<Head/>
This reusable React component will manage all of your changes to the document head. It takes plain HTML tags and outputs plain HTML tags and is beginner-friendly. It is a wrapper around React Helmet.
Usage Example:
import React from 'react';
import Head from '@docusaurus/Head';
const MySEO = () => (
<Head>
<meta property="og:description" content="My custom description" />
<meta charSet="utf-8" />
<title>My Title</title>
<link rel="canonical" href="http://mysite.com/example" />
</Head>
);
Nested or latter components will override duplicate usages:
<Parent>
<Head>
<title>My Title</title>
<meta name="description" content="Helmet application" />
</Head>
<Child>
<Head>
<title>Nested Title</title>
<meta name="description" content="Nested component" />
</Head>
</Child>
</Parent>
Outputs:
<head>
<title>Nested Title</title>
<meta name="description" content="Nested component" />
</head>
<Link/>
This component enables linking to internal pages as well as a powerful performance feature called preloading. Preloading is used to prefetch resources so that the resources are fetched by the time the user navigates with this component. We use an IntersectionObserver
to fetch a low-priority request when the <Link>
is in the viewport and then use an onMouseOver
event to trigger a high-priority request when it is likely that a user will navigate to the requested resource.
The component is a wrapper around react-router’s <Link>
component that adds useful enhancements specific to Docusaurus. All props are passed through to react-router’s <Link>
component.
External links also work, and automatically have these props: target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"
.
import React from 'react';
import Link from '@docusaurus/Link';
const Page = () => (
<div>
<p>
Check out my <Link to="/blog">blog</Link>!
</p>
<p>
Follow me on <Link to="https://x.com/docusaurus">X</Link>!
</p>
</div>
);
to
: string
The target location to navigate to. Example: /docs/introduction
.
<Link to="/courses" />
Prefer this component to vanilla <a>
tags because Docusaurus does a lot of optimizations (e.g. broken path detection, prefetching, applying base URL...) if you use <Link>
.
<Redirect/>
Rendering a <Redirect>
will navigate to a new location. The new location will override the current location in the history stack like server-side redirects (HTTP 3xx) do. You can refer to React Router's Redirect documentation for more info on available props.
Example usage:
import React from 'react';
import {Redirect} from '@docusaurus/router';
const Home = () => {
return <Redirect to="/docs/test" />;
};
@docusaurus/router
implements React Router and supports its features.
<BrowserOnly/>
The <BrowserOnly>
component permits to render React components only in the browser after the React app has hydrated.
Use it for integrating with code that can't run in Node.js, because the window
or document
objects are being accessed.
Props
children
: render function prop returning browser-only JSX. Will not be executed in Node.jsfallback
(optional): JSX to render on the server (Node.js) and until React hydration completes.
Example with code
import BrowserOnly from '@docusaurus/BrowserOnly';
const MyComponent = () => {
return (
<BrowserOnly>
{() => <span>page url = {window.location.href}</span>}
</BrowserOnly>
);
};
Example with a library
import BrowserOnly from '@docusaurus/BrowserOnly';
const MyComponent = (props) => {
return (
<BrowserOnly fallback={<div>Loading...</div>}>
{() => {
const LibComponent = require('some-lib').LibComponent;
return <LibComponent {...props} />;
}}
</BrowserOnly>
);
};
<Interpolate/>
A simple interpolation component for text containing dynamic placeholders.
The placeholders will be replaced with the provided dynamic values and JSX elements of your choice (strings, links, styled elements...).
Props
children
: text containing interpolation placeholders like{placeholderName}
values
: object containing interpolation placeholder values
import React from 'react';
import Link from '@docusaurus/Link';
import Interpolate from '@docusaurus/Interpolate';
export default function VisitMyWebsiteMessage() {
return (
<Interpolate
values={{
firstName: 'Sébastien',
website: (
<Link to="https://docusaurus.io" className="my-website-class">
website
</Link>
),
}}>
{'Hello, {firstName}! How are you? Take a look at my {website}'}
</Interpolate>
);
}
<Translate/>
When localizing your site, the <Translate/>
component will allow providing translation support to React components, such as your homepage. The <Translate>
component supports interpolation.
The translation strings will statically extracted from your code with the docusaurus write-translations
CLI and a code.json
translation file will be created in website/i18n/[locale]
.
The <Translate/>
props must be hardcoded strings.
Apart from the values
prop used for interpolation, it is not possible to use variables, or the static extraction wouldn't work.
Props
children
: untranslated string in the default site locale (can contain interpolation placeholders)id
: optional value to be used as the key in JSON translation filesdescription
: optional text to help the translatorvalues
: optional object containing interpolation placeholder values
Example
import React from 'react';
import Layout from '@theme/Layout';
import Translate from '@docusaurus/Translate';
export default function Home() {
return (
<Layout>
<h1>
<Translate
id="homepage.title"
description="The homepage welcome message">
Welcome to my website
</Translate>
</h1>
<main>
<Translate values={{firstName: 'Sébastien'}}>
{'Welcome, {firstName}! How are you?'}
</Translate>
</main>
</Layout>
);
}
You can even omit the children prop and specify a translation string in your code.json
file manually after running the docusaurus write-translations
CLI command.
<Translate id="homepage.title" />
The <Translate>
component supports interpolation. You can also implement string pluralization through some custom code and the translate
imperative API.
Hooks
useDocusaurusContext
React hook to access Docusaurus Context. The context contains the siteConfig
object from docusaurus.config.js and some additional site metadata.
type PluginVersionInformation =
| {readonly type: 'package'; readonly version?: string}
| {readonly type: 'project'}
| {readonly type: 'local'}
| {readonly type: 'synthetic'};
type SiteMetadata = {
readonly docusaurusVersion: string;
readonly siteVersion?: string;
readonly pluginVersions: Record<string, PluginVersionInformation>;
};
type I18nLocaleConfig = {
label: string;
direction: string;
};
type I18n = {
defaultLocale: string;
locales: [string, ...string[]];
currentLocale: string;
localeConfigs: Record<string, I18nLocaleConfig>;
};
type DocusaurusContext = {
siteConfig: DocusaurusConfig;
siteMetadata: SiteMetadata;
globalData: Record<string, unknown>;
i18n: I18n;
codeTranslations: Record<string, string>;
};
Usage example:
import React from 'react';
import useDocusaurusContext from '@docusaurus/useDocusaurusContext';
const MyComponent = () => {
const {siteConfig, siteMetadata} = useDocusaurusContext();
return (
<div>
<h1>{siteConfig.title}</h1>
<div>{siteMetadata.siteVersion}</div>
<div>{siteMetadata.docusaurusVersion}</div>
</div>
);
};
The siteConfig
object only contains serializable values (values that are preserved after JSON.stringify()
). Functions, regexes, etc. would be lost on the client side.
useIsBrowser
Returns true
when the React app has successfully hydrated in the browser.
Use this hook instead of typeof windows !== 'undefined'
in React rendering logic.
The first client-side render output (in the browser) must be exactly the same as the server-side render output (Node.js). Not following this rule can lead to unexpected hydration behaviors, as described in The Perils of Rehydration.
Usage example:
import React from 'react';
import useIsBrowser from '@docusaurus/useIsBrowser';
const MyComponent = () => {
const isBrowser = useIsBrowser();
return <div>{isBrowser ? 'Client' : 'Server'}</div>;
};
useBaseUrl
React hook to prepend your site baseUrl
to a string.
Don't use it for regular links!
The /baseUrl/
prefix is automatically added to all absolute paths by default:
- Markdown:
[link](/my/path)
will link to/baseUrl/my/path
- React:
<Link to="/my/path/">link</Link>
will link to/baseUrl/my/path
Options
type BaseUrlOptions = {
forcePrependBaseUrl: boolean;
absolute: boolean;
};
Example usage:
import React from 'react';
import useBaseUrl from '@docusaurus/useBaseUrl';
const SomeImage = () => {
const imgSrc = useBaseUrl('/img/myImage.png');
return <img src={imgSrc} />;
};
In most cases, you don't need useBaseUrl
.
Prefer a require()
call for assets:
<img src={require('@site/static/img/myImage.png').default} />
useBaseUrlUtils
Sometimes useBaseUrl
is not good enough. This hook return additional utils related to your site's base URL.
withBaseUrl
: useful if you need to add base URLs to multiple URLs at once.
import React from 'react';
import {useBaseUrlUtils} from '@docusaurus/useBaseUrl';
const Component = () => {
const urls = ['/a', '/b'];
const {withBaseUrl} = useBaseUrlUtils();
const urlsWithBaseUrl = urls.map(withBaseUrl);
return <div>{/* ... */}</div>;
};
useGlobalData
React hook to access Docusaurus global data created by all the plugins.
Global data is namespaced by plugin name then by plugin ID.
Plugin ID is only useful when a plugin is used multiple times on the same site. Each plugin instance is able to create its own global data.
type GlobalData = Record<
PluginName,
Record<
PluginId, // "default" by default
any // plugin-specific data
>
>;
Usage example:
import React from 'react';
import useGlobalData from '@docusaurus/useGlobalData';
const MyComponent = () => {
const globalData = useGlobalData();
const myPluginData = globalData['my-plugin']['default'];
return <div>{myPluginData.someAttribute}</div>;
};
Inspect your site's global data at .docusaurus/globalData.json
usePluginData
Access global data created by a specific plugin instance.
This is the most convenient hook to access plugin global data and should be used most of the time.
pluginId
is optional if you don't use multi-instance plugins.
function usePluginData(
pluginName: string,
pluginId?: string,
options?: {failfast?: boolean},
);
Usage example:
import React from 'react';
import {usePluginData} from '@docusaurus/useGlobalData';
const MyComponent = () => {
const myPluginData = usePluginData('my-plugin');
return <div>{myPluginData.someAttribute}</div>;
};
useAllPluginInstancesData
Access global data created by a specific plugin. Given a plugin name, it returns the data of all the plugins instances of that name, by plugin id.
function useAllPluginInstancesData(
pluginName: string,
options?: {failfast?: boolean},
);
Usage example:
import React from 'react';
import {useAllPluginInstancesData} from '@docusaurus/useGlobalData';
const MyComponent = () => {
const allPluginInstancesData = useAllPluginInstancesData('my-plugin');
const myPluginData = allPluginInstancesData['default'];
return <div>{myPluginData.someAttribute}</div>;
};
useBrokenLinks
React hook to access the Docusaurus broken link checker APIs, exposing a way for a Docusaurus pages to report and collect their links and anchors.
This is an advanced API that most Docusaurus users don't need to use directly.
It is already built-in in existing high-level components:
- the
<Link>
component will collect links for you - the
@theme/Heading
(used for Markdown headings) will collect anchors
Use useBrokenLinks()
if you implement your own <Heading>
or <Link>
component.
Usage example:
import useBrokenLinks from '@docusaurus/useBrokenLinks';
export default function MyHeading(props) {
useBrokenLinks().collectAnchor(props.id);
return <h2 {...props} />;
}
import useBrokenLinks from '@docusaurus/useBrokenLinks';
export default function MyLink(props) {
useBrokenLinks().collectLink(props.href);
return <a {...props} />;
}
Functions
interpolate
The imperative counterpart of the <Interpolate>
component.
Signature
// Simple string interpolation
function interpolate(text: string, values: Record<string, string>): string;
// JSX interpolation
function interpolate(
text: string,
values: Record<string, ReactNode>,
): ReactNode;
Example
import {interpolate} from '@docusaurus/Interpolate';
const message = interpolate('Welcome {firstName}', {firstName: 'Sébastien'});
translate
The imperative counterpart of the <Translate>
component. Also supporting placeholders interpolation.
Use the imperative API for the rare cases where a component cannot be used, such as:
- the page
title
metadata - the
placeholder
props of form inputs - the
aria-label
props for accessibility
Signature
function translate(
translation: {message: string; id?: string; description?: string},
values: Record<string, string>,
): string;
Example
import React from 'react';
import Layout from '@theme/Layout';
import {translate} from '@docusaurus/Translate';
export default function Home() {
return (
<Layout
title={translate({message: 'My page meta title'})}>
<img
src={'https://docusaurus.io/logo.png'}
aria-label={
translate(
{
message: 'The logo of site {siteName}',
// Optional
id: 'homepage.logo.ariaLabel',
description: 'The home page logo aria label',
},
{siteName: 'Docusaurus'},
)
}
/>
</Layout>
);
}
Modules
ExecutionEnvironment
A module that exposes a few boolean variables to check the current rendering environment.
For React rendering logic, use useIsBrowser()
or <BrowserOnly>
instead.
Example:
import ExecutionEnvironment from '@docusaurus/ExecutionEnvironment';
if (ExecutionEnvironment.canUseDOM) {
require('lib-that-only-works-client-side');
}
Field | Description |
---|---|
ExecutionEnvironment.canUseDOM | true if on client/browser, false on Node.js/prerendering. |
ExecutionEnvironment.canUseEventListeners | true if on client and has window.addEventListener . |
ExecutionEnvironment.canUseIntersectionObserver | true if on client and has IntersectionObserver . |
ExecutionEnvironment.canUseViewport | true if on client and has window.screen . |
constants
A module exposing useful constants to client-side theme code.
import {DEFAULT_PLUGIN_ID} from '@docusaurus/constants';
Named export | Value |
---|---|
DEFAULT_PLUGIN_ID | default |