with one click
react
React renderer for json-render that turns JSON specs into React components. Use when working with @json-render/react, building React UIs from JSON, creating component catalogs, or rendering AI-generated specs.
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React renderer for json-render that turns JSON specs into React components. Use when working with @json-render/react, building React UIs from JSON, creating component catalogs, or rendering AI-generated specs.
Pre-built custom directives for json-render — formatting, math, string manipulation, and i18n. Use when working with @json-render/directives, defining custom directives with defineDirective, or adding $format, $math, $concat, $count, $truncate, $pluralize, $join, or $t to specs.
Drop-in inspector panel for any json-render app. Use when the user wants to debug a generative UI, inspect the spec tree, edit state at runtime, see dispatched actions, follow stream patches live, browse a catalog, or pick DOM elements to find their spec keys. Triggers include "add devtools", "debug json-render", "inspect the spec", "why is this element not rendering", "see the state at runtime", or requests to tap streams / capture action logs for `@json-render/devtools`.
Pre-built shadcn-svelte components for json-render Svelte apps. Use when working with @json-render/shadcn-svelte, adding standard UI components to a Svelte catalog, or building Svelte web UIs with shadcn-svelte + Tailwind CSS components.
Next.js renderer for json-render that turns JSON specs into full Next.js applications with routes, layouts, SSR, and metadata. Use when working with @json-render/next, building Next.js apps from JSON specs, or creating AI-generated multi-page applications.
Ink terminal renderer for json-render that turns JSON specs into interactive terminal UIs. Use when working with @json-render/ink, building terminal UIs from JSON, creating terminal component catalogs, or rendering AI-generated specs in the terminal.
Core package for defining schemas, catalogs, and AI prompt generation for json-render. Use when working with @json-render/core, defining schemas, creating catalogs, or building JSON specs for UI/video generation.
| name | react |
| description | React renderer for json-render that turns JSON specs into React components. Use when working with @json-render/react, building React UIs from JSON, creating component catalogs, or rendering AI-generated specs. |
React renderer that converts JSON specs into React component trees.
import { defineRegistry, Renderer } from "@json-render/react";
import { catalog } from "./catalog";
const { registry } = defineRegistry(catalog, {
components: {
Card: ({ props, children }) => <div>{props.title}{children}</div>,
},
});
function App({ spec }) {
return <Renderer spec={spec} registry={registry} />;
}
import { defineCatalog } from "@json-render/core";
import { schema } from "@json-render/react/schema";
import { defineRegistry } from "@json-render/react";
import { z } from "zod";
// Create catalog with props schemas
export const catalog = defineCatalog(schema, {
components: {
Button: {
props: z.object({
label: z.string(),
variant: z.enum(["primary", "secondary"]).nullable(),
}),
description: "Clickable button",
},
Card: {
props: z.object({ title: z.string() }),
description: "Card container with title",
},
},
});
// Define component implementations with type-safe props
const { registry } = defineRegistry(catalog, {
components: {
Button: ({ props }) => (
<button className={props.variant}>{props.label}</button>
),
Card: ({ props, children }) => (
<div className="card">
<h2>{props.title}</h2>
{children}
</div>
),
},
});
The React schema uses an element tree format:
{
"root": {
"type": "Card",
"props": { "title": "Hello" },
"children": [
{ "type": "Button", "props": { "label": "Click me" } }
]
}
}
Use visible on elements to show/hide based on state. New syntax: { "$state": "/path" }, { "$state": "/path", "eq": value }, { "$state": "/path", "not": true }, { "$and": [cond1, cond2] } for AND, { "$or": [cond1, cond2] } for OR. Helpers: visibility.when("/path"), visibility.unless("/path"), visibility.eq("/path", val), visibility.and(cond1, cond2), visibility.or(cond1, cond2).
| Provider | Purpose |
|---|---|
StateProvider | Share state across components (JSON Pointer paths). Accepts optional store prop for controlled mode. |
ActionProvider | Handle actions dispatched via the event system |
VisibilityProvider | Enable conditional rendering based on state |
ValidationProvider | Form field validation |
Pass a StateStore to StateProvider (or JSONUIProvider / createRenderer) to use external state management (Redux, Zustand, XState, etc.):
import { createStateStore, type StateStore } from "@json-render/react";
const store = createStateStore({ count: 0 });
<StateProvider store={store}>{children}</StateProvider>
// Mutate from anywhere — React re-renders automatically:
store.set("/count", 1);
When store is provided, initialState and onStateChange are ignored.
Any prop value can be a data-driven expression resolved by the renderer before components receive props:
{ "$state": "/state/key" } - reads from state model (one-way read){ "$bindState": "/path" } - two-way binding: reads from state and enables write-back. Use on the natural value prop (value, checked, pressed, etc.) of form components.{ "$bindItem": "field" } - two-way binding to a repeat item field. Use inside repeat scopes.{ "$cond": <condition>, "$then": <value>, "$else": <value> } - conditional value{ "$template": "Hello, ${/name}!" } - interpolates state values into strings{ "$computed": "fn", "args": { ... } } - calls registered functions with resolved args{
"type": "Input",
"props": {
"value": { "$bindState": "/form/email" },
"placeholder": "Email"
}
}
Components do not use a statePath prop for two-way binding. Use { "$bindState": "/path" } on the natural value prop instead.
Components receive already-resolved props. For two-way bound props, use the useBoundProp hook with the bindings map the renderer provides.
Register $computed functions via the functions prop on JSONUIProvider or createRenderer:
<JSONUIProvider
functions={{ fullName: (args) => `${args.first} ${args.last}` }}
>
Components use emit to fire named events, or on() to get an event handle with metadata. The element's on field maps events to action bindings:
// Simple event firing
Button: ({ props, emit }) => (
<button onClick={() => emit("press")}>{props.label}</button>
),
// Event handle with metadata (e.g. preventDefault)
Link: ({ props, on }) => {
const click = on("click");
return (
<a href={props.href} onClick={(e) => {
if (click.shouldPreventDefault) e.preventDefault();
click.emit();
}}>{props.label}</a>
);
},
{
"type": "Button",
"props": { "label": "Submit" },
"on": { "press": { "action": "submit" } }
}
The EventHandle returned by on() has: emit(), shouldPreventDefault (boolean), and bound (boolean).
Elements can declare a watch field (top-level, sibling of type/props/children) to trigger actions when state values change:
{
"type": "Select",
"props": { "value": { "$bindState": "/form/country" }, "options": ["US", "Canada"] },
"watch": { "/form/country": { "action": "loadCities" } },
"children": []
}
The setState, pushState, removeState, and validateForm actions are built into the React schema and handled automatically by ActionProvider. They are injected into AI prompts without needing to be declared in catalog actions:
{ "action": "setState", "params": { "statePath": "/activeTab", "value": "home" } }
{ "action": "pushState", "params": { "statePath": "/items", "value": { "text": "New" } } }
{ "action": "removeState", "params": { "statePath": "/items", "index": 0 } }
{ "action": "validateForm", "params": { "statePath": "/formResult" } }
validateForm validates all registered fields and writes { valid, errors } to state.
Note: statePath in action params (e.g. setState.statePath) targets the mutation path. Two-way binding in component props uses { "$bindState": "/path" } on the value prop, not statePath.
For form components that need two-way binding, use useBoundProp with the bindings map the renderer provides when a prop uses { "$bindState": "/path" } or { "$bindItem": "field" }:
import { useBoundProp } from "@json-render/react";
Input: ({ element, bindings }) => {
const [value, setValue] = useBoundProp<string>(
element.props.value,
bindings?.value
);
return (
<input
value={value ?? ""}
onChange={(e) => setValue(e.target.value)}
/>
);
},
useBoundProp(propValue, bindingPath) returns [value, setValue]. The value is the resolved prop; setValue writes back to the bound state path (no-op if not bound).
For building reusable component libraries not tied to a specific catalog (e.g. @json-render/shadcn):
import type { BaseComponentProps } from "@json-render/react";
const Card = ({ props, children }: BaseComponentProps<{ title?: string }>) => (
<div>{props.title}{children}</div>
);
defineRegistry conditionally requires the actions field only when the catalog declares actions. Catalogs with actions: {} can omit it.
| Export | Purpose |
|---|---|
defineRegistry | Create a type-safe component registry from a catalog |
Renderer | Render a spec using a registry |
schema | Element tree schema (includes built-in state actions: setState, pushState, removeState, validateForm) |
useStateStore | Access state context |
useStateValue | Get single value from state |
useBoundProp | Two-way binding for $bindState/$bindItem expressions |
useActions | Access actions context |
useAction | Get a single action dispatch function |
useOptionalValidation | Non-throwing variant of useValidation (returns null if no provider) |
useUIStream | Stream specs from an API endpoint |
createStateStore | Create a framework-agnostic in-memory StateStore |
StateStore | Interface for plugging in external state management |
BaseComponentProps | Catalog-agnostic base type for reusable component libraries |
EventHandle | Event handle type (emit, shouldPreventDefault, bound) |
ComponentContext | Typed component context (catalog-aware) |