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Kontent.ai Sample app GraphQL React

Node.js CI Live Demo

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This sample app showcase Kontent.ai GraphQL API endpoint usage in combination with React.js using Apollo client.

Getting started

In this section you can find how to get the application ready in development mode.

Prerequisites

Run site in development

In the project directory, install all dependencies and run the development environment.

npm install
npm start

🎉 Open http://localhost:3000 with your browser to see the result.

(Optional) Create your own data source project in Kontent.ai

This optional section allows you to create your own copy of the project in Kontent.ai so that you can make changes. If you skip this step, the application is connected to the published data of a shared project that is read-only via API for you.

Create Kontent.ai project
  1. Create an account on Kontent.ai

  2. After signing up, create an empty project.

  3. Go to the "Project Settings", select API keys and copy the following keys for further reference

    • Project ID
    • Management API key
  4. Use the Kontent.ai Backup Manager and import data to the newly created project from kontent-backup.zip file via command line:

     npm i -g @kentico/kontent-backup-manager@3.0.1
     # or
     yarn global add @kentico/kontent-backup-manager@3.0.1
    
     kbm --action=restore --projectId=<Project ID> --apiKey=<Management API key> --zipFilename=kontent-backup
  5. Go to your Kontent.ai project and publish the imported items.

Environment variables
  1. Set up environment variables

    • Copy the .env.template file in this directory to .env (which will be ignored by Git):

      cp .env.template .env
  2. Run the development server

    npm run start

🎉 Open http://localhost:3000 with your browser to see the result.

By default, the content is loaded from a shared Kontent.ai project. If you want to use your own clone of the project so that you can customize it and experiment with Kontent, continue to the next section.

Variable Required Description
REACT_APP_KONTENT_PROJECT_ID NO Project identification
REACT_APP_KONTENT_GRAPHQL_ENDPOINT NO Kontent.ai GraphQL endpoint
REACT_APP_KONTENT_PREVIEW_API_KEY NO Preview API key to retrieve unpublished content. If set, the application is fetching unpublished content, if not published content is being fetched.
REACT_APP_GA_ANALYTICS_TOKEN NO If you want to inject Google analytics script

Content editing development

Run the development server:

npm start

🎉 Open http://localhost:3000 with your browser to see the result.

You can start editing the page by modifying content in Kontent.ai project. The page auto-updates as you edit the content, but you need to publish the changes in order to see them on site.

Available Scripts

  • npm start - Runs the app in the development mode. Open http://localhost:3000 to view it in the browser.
  • npm test - Launches the test runner in the interactive watch mode. See the section about running tests for more information.
  • npm build - Builds the app for production to the build folder. It correctly bundles React in production mode and optimizes the build for the best performance. See the section about deployment for more information.
  • npm eject - Note: this is a one-way operation. Once you eject, you can’t go back! If you aren’t satisfied with the build tool and configuration choices, you can eject at any time. This command will remove the single build dependency from your project.

About

This section describes the content model of the site and the use cases that are supposed to demonstrate GraphQL capabilities.

Content Model

The site is using a simple layout. A header with a Logo and a menu. Depending on the type of the "Content" you can have one of the layouts:

  • Landing page - List of various sections displayed as rows.
  • Listing page - A grid of homogenous content pieces - specifically articles in the sample.
  • Simple page - A simple page rendering the title, subtitle, image, and rich text element.

Page types

Layout - global/shared data

This data is stored in Homepage content item containing information about SEO, sitemap, layout (menu, title, copyright), and logo.

This data loaded in the App component as part of the query. Simplified version of the query could be seen below:

{
  homepage(codename: "home_page") {
    title
    favicon {
      url
    }
    font {
      _system_ {
        codename
      }
    }
    palette {
      _system_ {
        codename
      }
    }
  }
}

Sitemap construction

Element subpages of Homepage, prepared for Web Spotlight feature, is used as a root of the Sitemap structure. It is a hierarchical structure, that allows mapping URLs items in the sitemap to content items and vice-versa.

To achieve mapping "URL"<->"Navigation Item", there is a content type named Navigation Item that could be linked hierarchically (since it is also containing subpages element). This data (mappings property) is then used across tha application for link resolution.

Sitemap level

Hierarchical Sitemap is showcased under /about-us/more-information.

Sitemap hierarchy

There are also Listing pages showcased on /blog listing page containing detail pages /blog/<POST-URL-SLUG> i.e. /blog/5-tips-to-solve-your-problems. This registration is based in Listing page (described in Content model section). Listing page specifies by the content_type text field what content items should be registered under its route (expecting this type has URL slug set) - more information in Listing page section.

Listing page items registration

Simplified version of the data loading:

{
  homepage(codename: "home_page") {
    subpages {
      items {
        ... on NavigationItem {
          ...SubpageNavigationItemFields # see ~/src/graphQLFragments.js
          subpages {
            items {
              ...SubpageNavigationItemFields # see ~/src/graphQLFragments.js
            }
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Menu

The menu is modeled using main_menu linked items element of the Homepage that contains the item with single-level list of menu items linked in actions element.

Menu Content model

The data loaded in the App component are then rendered in the Header component.

Menu Screenshot

Simplified version of the data loading:

{
  homepage(codename: "home_page") {
    mainMenu(limit: 1) {
      items {
        ... on Menu {
          _system_ {
            codename
          }
          actions {
            items {
              ... on Action {
                ...ActionFields # see ~/src/graphQLFragments.js
              }
            }
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Simple page

Rich text resolution itself depends on technology you are using. But Rich text element itself is providing all data for the resolution.

Following sections showcase what properties you could use to load this data. All of these resolutions is showcases in /style-guide simple page.

Rich text resolution

Components

{
  simplePage(codename: "style_guide") {
    content {
      # Rich text element
      html
      components {
        items {
          _system_ {
            id
            codename
            type {
              _system_ {
                codename
              }
            }
          }
          ... on Quote {
            quoteText
          }
          ... on CodeBlock {
            code {
              html
            }
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Inline linked items

{
  simplePage(codename: "style_guide") {
    content {
      # Rich text element
      html
      modularContent {
        items {
          _system_ {
            id
            codename
            type {
              _system_ {
                codename
              }
            }
          }
          ... on Quote {
            quoteText
          }
          ... on CodeBlock {
            code {
              html
            }
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Links

{
  simplePage(codename: "style_guide") {
    content {
      # Rich text element
      html
      links {
        items {
          ... on Quote {
            quoteText
          }
          ... on CodeBlock {
            code {
              html
            }
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Assets

{
  simplePage(codename: "style_guide") {
    content {
      # Rich text element
      html
      assets {
        url
        name
        description
        imageId
      }
    }
  }
}

Landing page

Landing page itself showcases a resolution of different content types linked in single linked items element.

Landing page section schema

Sections of the landing page linked items resolution

Landing page is using linked items element called sections.

In this use case it is a list of section and application is using system.type to distinguish what component from ~/src/component/sections to render. The logic is in ~src/LandingPage.js.

{
  landingPage(codename: "main_content") {
    sections {
      items {
        _system_ {
          codename
          type {
            _system_ {
              codename
            }
          }
        }
        ... on HeroSection {
          image {
            ...AssetFields # see ~/src/graphQLFragments.js
          }
          title
          content {
            ...RichTextFields # see ~/src/graphQLFragments.js
          }
          actions {
            items {
              ...ActionFields # see ~/src/graphQLFragments.js
            }
          }
        }
        ... on FeaturesSection {
          title
          subtitle {
            ...RichTextFields # see ~/src/graphQLFragments.js
          }
          features {
            items {
              ... on Feature {
                image {
                  ...AssetFields # see ~/src/graphQLFragments.js
                }
                title
                content {
                  ...RichTextFields # see ~/src/graphQLFragments.js
                }
                actions {
                  items {
                    ...ActionFields # see ~/src/graphQLFragments.js
                  }
                }
              }
            }
          }
        }
        ... on CtaSection {
          title
          subtitle {
            ...RichTextFields # see ~/src/graphQLFragments.js
          }
          action {
            items {
              ...ActionFields # see ~/src/graphQLFragments.js
            }
          }
        }
        ... on ListingSection {
          title
          subtitle {
            ...RichTextFields # see ~/src/graphQLFragments.js
          }
          orderBy
          contentType
          numberOfItems
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Listing page

Listing page showcase a various features you can stumble upon if you want to list content items with possibility to provide a detail.

Listing page example

Listing - detail

The core it so to implement the list with detail pages.

What to list is defined in the Listing page content type by the content_type test element specifying, what types you want to list. It is possible to extend the use case, to define multiple types and limit/filter them somehow.

Blog Listing page example

The implementation of the listing page is stored in src/ListingPage.js.

{
  post_All {
    # Strongly typed collections of items based on `Post`content type
    items {
      _system_ {
        type {
          _system_ {
            codename
          }
        }
        codename
      }
      image {
        ...AssetFields
      }
      title
      slug
      excerpt
      publishingDate
      author {
        ... on Author {
          firstName
          lastName
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Detail page of the post is implemented in ~src/Post.js:

query PostPageQuery($codename: String!) {
  post(codename: $codename) {
    seo {
      ...SeoFields # see ~/src/graphQLFragments.js
    }
    _system_ {
      type {
        _system_ {
          codename
        }
      }
    }
    image {
      ...AssetFields # see ~/src/graphQLFragments.js
    }
    title
    publishingDate
    author(limit: 1) {
      items {
        ... on Author {
          firstName
          lastName
        }
      }
    }
    subtitle
    content {
      ...RichTextFields # see ~/src/graphQLFragments.js
    }
  }
}

Paging

Paging information is provided by query string parameter page, so if you want a second page the URL would be /blog?page=2. The size of the page is hardcoded to 3, but could be configurable as well as the pace number.

In GraphQl, you just use a filter in the query:

query PostsQuery($limit: Int, $offset: Int) {
  post_All(limit: $limit, offset: $offset) {
    # Strongly typed collections of items based on `Post`content type
    items {
      # ...
    }
  }
}

Filtering

You can extend the posts query setting where parameter in query.

Filter blogs by author

query PostsQuery($author: String) {
  post_All(where: {author: {containsAny: [$author]}}) {
    # Strongly typed collections of items based on `Post`content type
    items {
      # ...
    }
  }
}

Filter blog by persona

query PostsQuery($persona: String) {
  post_All(where: {persona: {containsAny: [$persona]}}) {
    # Strongly typed collections of items based on `Post`content type
    items {
      # ...
    }
  }
}

Filter blog by multiple conditions (persona and author)

query PostsQuery($persona: String) {
  post_All(where: { 
    AND: [ # It is also possible to use OR and create more complex filter queries
          { persona: {containsAny: [$persona]} },
          { author: {containsAny: [$author]} }
    ]
  }) {
    # Strongly typed collections of items based on `Post`content type
    items {
      # ...
    }
  }
}

Tracking

The package is including tracking header to the requests to Kontent, which helps to identify the adoption of the source plugin and helps to analyze what happened in case of error. If you think that tracking should be optional feel free to raise the feature or pull request.

Learn More

This project was bootstrapped with Create React App.

You can learn more in the Create React App documentation.

To learn React, check out the React documentation.