A glossy Matrix collaboration client for the web.
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matrix-react-sdk

This is a react-based SDK for inserting a Matrix chat/voip client into a web page.

This package provides the logic and 'controller' parts for the UI components. This forms one part of a complete matrix client, but it not useable in isolation. It must be used from a 'skin'. A skin provides:

  • The HTML for the UI components (in the form of React render methods)
  • The CSS for this HTML
  • The containing application
  • Zero or more 'modules' containing non-UI functionality

Skins are modules are exported from such a package in the lib directory. lib/skins contains one directory per-skin, named after the skin, and the modules directory contains modules as their javascript files.

A basic skin is provided in the matrix-react-skin package. This also contains a minimal application that instantiates the basic skin making a working matrix client.

You can use matrix-react-sdk directly, but to do this you would have to provide 'views' for each UI component. To get started quickly, use matrix-react-skin.

How to customise the SDK

The SDK uses the 'atomic' design pattern as seen at http://patternlab.io to encourage a very modular and reusable architecture, making it easy to customise and use UI widgets independently of the rest of the SDK and your app. In practice this means:

  • The UI of the app is strictly split up into a hierarchy of components.

  • Each component has its own:

    • View object defined as a React javascript class containing embedded HTML expressed in React's JSX notation.
    • CSS file, which defines the styling specific to that component.
  • Components are loosely grouped into the 5 levels outlined by atomic design:

    • atoms: fundamental building blocks (e.g. a timestamp tag)
    • molecules: "group of atoms which functions together as a unit" (e.g. a message in a chat timeline)
    • organisms: "groups of molecules (and atoms) which form a distinct section of a UI" (e.g. a view of a chat room)
    • templates: "a reusable configuration of organisms" - used to combine and style organisms into a well-defined global look and feel
    • pages: specific instances of templates.

Good separation between the components is maintained by adopting various best practices that anyone working with the SDK needs to be be aware of and uphold:

  • Views are named with upper camel case (e.g. molecules/MessageTile.js)

  • The view's CSS file MUST have the same name (e.g. molecules/MessageTile.css)

  • Per-view CSS is optional - it could choose to inherit all its styling from the context of the rest of the app, although this is unusual for any but the simplest atoms and molecules.

  • The view MUST only refer to the CSS rules defined in its own CSS file. 'Stealing' styling information from other components (including parents) is not cool, as it breaks the independence of the components.

  • CSS classes are named with an app-specific namespacing prefix to try to avoid CSS collisions. The base skin shipped by Matrix.org with the matrix-react-sdk uses the naming prefix "mx_". A company called Yoyodyne Inc might use a prefix like "yy_" for its app-specific classes.

  • CSS classes use upper camel case when they describe React components - e.g. .mx_MessageTile is the selector for the CSS applied to a MessageTile view.

  • CSS classes for DOM elements within a view which aren't components are named by appending a lower camel case identifier to the view's class name - e.g. .mx_MessageTile_randomDiv is how you'd name the class of an arbitrary div within the MessageTile view.

  • We deliberately use vanilla CSS 3.0 to avoid adding any more magic dependencies into the mix than we already have. App developers are welcome to use whatever floats their boat however.

  • The CSS for a component can however override the rules for child components. For instance, .mx_RoomList .mx_RoomTile {} would be the selector to override styles of RoomTiles when viewed in the context of a RoomList view. Overrides must be scoped to the View's CSS class - i.e. don't just define .mx_RoomTile {} in RoomList.css - only RoomTile.css is allowed to define its own CSS. Instead, say .mx_RoomList .mx_RoomTile {} to scope the override only to the context of RoomList views. N.B. overrides should be relatively rare as in general CSS inheritence should be enough.

  • Components should render only within the bounding box of their outermost DOM element. Page-absolute positioning and negative CSS margins and similar are generally not cool and stop the component from being reused easily in different places.

  • We don't use the atomify library itself, as React already provides most of the modularity requirements it brings to the table.

With all this in mind, here's how you go about skinning the react SDK UI components to embed a Matrix client into your app:

  • Create a new NPM project. Be sure to directly depend on react, (otherwise you can end up with two copies of react).
  • Create an index.js file that sets up react. Add require statements for React and matrix-react-sdk. Load a skin using the 'loadSkin' method on the SDK and call Render. This can be a skin provided by a separate package or a skin in the same package.
  • Add a way to build your project: we suggest copying the scripts block from matrix-react-skin (which uses babel and webpack). You could use different tools but remember that at least the skins and modules of your project should end up in plain (ie. non ES6, non JSX) javascript in the lib directory at the end of the build process, as well as any packaging that you might do.
  • Create an index.html file pulling in your compiled javascript and the CSS bundle from the skin you use. For now, you'll also need to manually import CSS from any skins that your skin inherts from.

To Create Your Own Skin

To actually change the look of a skin, you can create a base skin (which does not use views from any other skin) or you can make a derived skin. Note that derived skins are currently experimental: for example, the CSS from the skins it is based on will not be automatically included.

To make a skin, create React classes for any custom components you wish to add in a skin within src/skins/<skin name>. These can be based off the files in views in the matrix-react-skin package, modifying the require() statement appropriately.

If you make a derived skin, you only need copy the files you wish to customise.

Once you've made all your view files, you need to make a skinfo.json. This contains all the metadata for a skin. This is a JSON file with, currently, a single key, 'baseSkin'. Set this to the empty string if your skin is a base skin, or for a derived skin, set it to the path of your base skin's skinfo.json file, as you would use in a require call.

Now you have the basis of a skin, you need to generate a skindex.json file. The reskindex.js tool in matrix-react-sdk does this for you. It is suggested that you add an npm script to run this, as in matrix-react-skin.

For more specific detail on any of these steps, look at matrix-react-skin.