Zeplin CLI plugin to generate descriptions and code snippets for React components.
Zeplin CLI React Plugin uses react-docgen and react-docgen-typescript to analyze and collect information from React components. For more details about the supported formats, see react-docgen
guidelines and react-docgen-typescript
examples.
Install the plugin using npm.
npm install -g @zeplin/cli-connect-react-plugin
Run CLI connect
command using the plugin.
zeplin connect -p @zeplin/cli-connect-react-plugin
You can choose to use either react-docgen
or react-docgen-typescript
for TypeScript in your plugin configurations.
{
...
"plugins" : [{
"name": "@zeplin/cli-connect-react-plugin",
"config": {
"tsDocgen": "react-docgen-typescript", // Default: "react-docgen"
"tsConfigPath": "/path/to/tsconfig.json" // Default: "./tsconfig.json"
}
}],
...
}
You can set which built-in react-docgen
resolver to use.
{
...
"plugins" : [{
"name": "@zeplin/cli-connect-react-plugin",
"config": {
// Default: "findAllExportedComponentDefinitions"
"reactDocgenResolver": "findExportedComponentDefinition",
}
}],
...
}
Connected Components in Zeplin lets you access components in your codebase directly on designs in Zeplin, with links to Storybook, GitHub and any other source of documentation based on your workflow. 🧩
Check Zeplin Connected Components Documentation for getting started.
Zeplin CLI uses plugins like this one to analyze component source code and publishes a high-level overview to be displayed in Zeplin.