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follow up to https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/32163 This continues the work of making Suspense workable anywhere in a react-dom tree. See the prior PRs for how we handle server rendering and client rendering. In this change we update the hydration implementation to be able to locate expected nodes. In particular this means hydration understands now that the default hydration context is the document body when the container is above the body. One case that is unique to hydration is clearing Suspense boundaries. When hydration fails or when the server instructs the client to recover an errored boundary it's possible that the html, head, and body tags in the initial document were written from a fallback or a different primary content on the server and need to be replaced by the client render. However these tags (and in the case of head, their content) won't be inside the comment nodes that identify the bounds of the Suspense boundary. And when client rendering you may not even render the same singletons that were server rendered. So when server rendering a boudnary which contributes to the preamble (the html, head, and body tag openings plus the head contents) we emit a special marker comment just before closing the boundary out. This marker encodes which parts of the preamble this boundary owned. If we need to clear the suspense boundary on the client we read this marker and use it to reset the appropriate singleton state.
react-markup
This package provides the ability to render standalone HTML from Server Components for use in embedded contexts such as e-mails and RSS/Atom feeds. It cannot use Client Components and does not hydrate. It is intended to be paired with the generic React package, which is shipped as react to npm.
Installation
npm install react react-markup
Usage
import { experimental_renderToHTML as renderToHTML } from 'react-markup';
import EmailTemplate from './my-email-template-component.js'
async function action(email, name) {
"use server";
// ... in your server, e.g. a Server Action...
const htmlString = await renderToHTML(<EmailTemplate name={name} />);
// ... send e-mail using some e-mail provider
await sendEmail({ to: email, contentType: 'text/html', body: htmlString });
}
Note that this is an async function that needs to be awaited - unlike the legacy renderToString in react-dom.
API
react-markup
See https://react.dev/reference/react-markup
Thanks
The React team thanks Nikolai Mavrenkov for donating the react-markup package name.