Reimplementation of classnames in ReScript.
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# yarn
yarn add rescript-classnames
# or npm
npm install --save rescript-classnamesThen add it to rescript.json:
"bs-dependencies": [
"rescript-classnames"
]You can use either Cn.make function:
Cn.make(["one", "two", "three"]) // => "one two three"Or open Cx module and use cx alias:
open Cx
cx(["one", "two", "three"]) // => "one two three"You can open Cx module globally via bsconfig.json and cx function will be available everywhere without a need to open Cx.
"bsc-flags": ["-open Cx"]To conditionally render a classname, use an empty string to indicate an absence of it.
cx(["button", disabled ? "disabled" : ""])Or use pattern matching to select the right classname for an input:
cx([
"button",
disabled ? "disabled" : "",
switch color {
| Green => "green"
| Red => "red"
},
])First of all, if you are really concerned with performance, consider using string interpolation as it's the fastest possible way to render classnames.
`button ${disabled ? "disabled" : ""}`Otherwise, rescript-classnames is reasonably fast.
js interpolation x 775,890,362 ops/sec ±1.46% (87 runs sampled)
rescript-classnames x 2,493,334 ops/sec ±0.64% (89 runs sampled)
classnames.js x 794,502 ops/sec ±0.62% (91 runs sampled)
P.S. To run benchmarks, change package-specs.module to commonjs in rescript.json.
See LICENSE.
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