The React Site Search Starter is an example repo of an Answers experience built with React and Answers Headless using Answers Headless React bindings. It is intended to be forked and modified to create a custom Answers experience.
To customize the sample site, first fork the repo from Github using the 'Fork' button on the top right of the Github page
- Next, clone the repo with the command:
git clone https://github.com/yext/react-site-search-starter.git
- Note: The URL will need to be updated if you are cloning a forked site
- Install the dependencies by running
npm i
- To run the app in development mode, run
npm start
The site's config files are located in the src/config
folder.
The answersHeadlessConfig
defines general configuration for the site. Refer to the HeadlessConfig
type from
'@yext/answers-headless' to view all of the configuration options. To configure it for a custom site, open
src/config/answersHeadlessConfig.ts
in a code editor and update the apiKey
and the experienceKey
to match
the keys associated with your Answers experience configuration.
The routeConfig
defines which pages are rendered for various URL paths.
Open src/config/routeConfig.tsx
and modify the object so that the verticalKey
props for the pages match
the verticalKeys for your search experience. Feel free to remove any routes which are not needed for your experience.
If you would like to add a new page, copy one of the existing pages from src/pages
and modify it to suit your needs.
The universalResultsConfig
configures the verticals rendered by the universal results component.
Open the universalResultsConfig from src/universalResultsConfig.ts
. Modify the object so that the keys of the object
are the vertical keys needed for your search experience. To view the configuration options for each vertical,
refer to the VerticalConfig interface from src/components/UniversalResults.tsx
The building block components which make up this starter app are located in src/components
. The components
provide robust prop interfaces for customizing their behavior. If the customiziation offered is not sufficient, the components
may be edited directly to suit your needs.
The styling of the components can be customized with the customCssClasses
and the cssCompositionMethod
props.
The customCssClasses
prop defines a CSS class interface which represents the component's DOM structure.
Tailwind utility classes can be provided to this class interface for customizing the styling. For example, the
padding around the Navigation
component can be adjusted by passing in the following object as the customCssClasses
prop:
{ nav: 'pt-10' }
The cssCompositionMethod
prop customizes how the customCssClasses
is combined with the built-in styling for the component.
- 'merge' keeps the component's built-in classes and adds the custom classes to them (default).
- 'replace' ignores all of the component’s built-in classes and only uses the custom classes.
- 'assign' keeps the component's built-in classes, however custom classes will completely override their associated built-in classes.
For example, suppose a component has a built-in theme of { icon: 'flex', button: 'px-4' }
,
and it is provided a custom theme of { icon: 'bg-white' }
.
The various composition methods would result in the following composed themes:
- Merge:
{ icon: 'flex bg-white', button: 'px-4' }
- Replace:
{ icon: 'bg-white' }
- Assign:
{ icon: 'bg-white', button: 'px-4' }
To create an optimized production build, run npm run build
The site will be available in the build
folder which can be served with a command such as npx serve -s build
The Yext React Site Search Starter is an open-sourced library licensed under the BSD-3 License.