Let’s download the desktop app to start. You can download for Linux, Windows, and Mac.
Unzip & run.
Did you B.Y.O.App? Skip to the next section.
Let’s use create-react-app to bootstrap a new React JS app because, wow, is it fantastic.
Download create-react-app
if you haven't yet:
npm i -g create-react-app
Then spin up a brand new React web app.
create-react-app this-better-work
cd this-better-work
Let's install Reactotron as a dev dependency.
npm i --save-dev reactotron-react-js
I like a separate file for initializing. Create src/ReactotronConfig.js
in your editor of choice and paste this:
import Reactotron from 'reactotron-react-js'
Reactotron
.configure() // we can use plugins here -- more on this later
.connect() // let's connect!
Finally, we import this on startup in src/index.js
on line 1:
import './ReactotronConfig'
At this point, Reactotron is hooked up.
Refresh your web page (or start it up npm start
) and have a look at Reactotron now. Do you see the CONNECTION
line? Click that to expand.
Go back to your web page and refresh the web page 5 or 6 times. Now look.
Pretty underwhelming huh?
Let's do some classic programming.
Open up src/App.js
.
At the top, let's put
import Reactotron from 'reactotron-react-js'
Next, inside the render()
function, put this as the first line:
Reactotron.log('hello rendering world')
Save that file and refresh your web page if you don't have live reloading.
Now Reactotron looks like this:
While collapsed, the grey area to the right shows a preview. Click to open.
Let's change our log statement to:
Reactotron.log({ numbers: [1, 2, 3], boolean: false, nested: { here: 'we go' } })
Or this
Reactotron.warn('*glares*')
Or this
Reactotron.error('Now you\'ve done it.')
Or this
Reactotron.display({
name: 'KNOCK KNOCK',
preview: 'Who\'s there?',
value: 'Orange.'
})
Reactotron.display({
name: 'ORANGE',
preview: 'Who?',
value: 'Orange you glad you don\'t know me in real life?',
important: true
})
Hooking up to redux requires some additional set up.
Well, at this point, we have a complicated version of console.log
.
Where Reactotron starts to shine is when you start plugging into Redux, tracking global errors, and watching network requests.
Check out our Demo for more goodies.