@powerhousedao/academy 5.0.0-staging.2 → 5.0.0-staging.20
This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
- package/.vscode/settings.json +1 -1
- package/CHANGELOG.md +115 -0
- package/README.md +3 -3
- package/babel.config.js +1 -1
- package/blog/BeyondCommunication-ABlueprintForDevelopment.md +25 -24
- package/blog/TheChallengeOfChange.md +21 -21
- package/docs/academy/01-GetStarted/00-ExploreDemoPackage.mdx +61 -24
- package/docs/academy/01-GetStarted/01-CreateNewPowerhouseProject.md +21 -12
- package/docs/academy/01-GetStarted/02-DefineToDoListDocumentModel.md +24 -19
- package/docs/academy/01-GetStarted/03-ImplementOperationReducers.md +44 -41
- package/docs/academy/01-GetStarted/04-BuildToDoListEditor.md +10 -10
- package/docs/academy/01-GetStarted/05-SpecDrivenAI.md +143 -0
- package/docs/academy/01-GetStarted/home.mdx +185 -90
- package/docs/academy/01-GetStarted/styles.module.css +5 -5
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/01-BuilderEnvironment/01-Prerequisites.md +46 -18
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/01-BuilderEnvironment/02-StandardDocumentModelWorkflow.md +118 -68
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/01-BuilderEnvironment/03-BuilderTools.md +75 -33
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/01-BuilderEnvironment/_category_.json +6 -6
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/02-DocumentModelCreation/01-WhatIsADocumentModel.md +30 -21
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/02-DocumentModelCreation/02-SpecifyTheStateSchema.md +41 -37
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/02-DocumentModelCreation/03-SpecifyDocumentOperations.md +29 -25
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/02-DocumentModelCreation/04-UseTheDocumentModelGenerator.md +36 -37
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/02-DocumentModelCreation/05-ImplementDocumentReducers.md +128 -109
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/02-DocumentModelCreation/06-ImplementDocumentModelTests.md +95 -86
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/02-DocumentModelCreation/07-ExampleToDoListRepository.md +7 -9
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/02-DocumentModelCreation/_category_.json +6 -6
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/03-BuildingUserExperiences/01-BuildingDocumentEditors.md +65 -47
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/03-BuildingUserExperiences/02-ConfiguringDrives.md +77 -62
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/03-BuildingUserExperiences/03-BuildingADriveExplorer.md +360 -349
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/03-BuildingUserExperiences/06-DocumentTools/00-DocumentToolbar.mdx +16 -10
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/03-BuildingUserExperiences/06-DocumentTools/01-OperationHistory.md +10 -7
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/03-BuildingUserExperiences/06-DocumentTools/02-RevisionHistoryTimeline.md +26 -11
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/03-BuildingUserExperiences/06-DocumentTools/_category_.json +6 -6
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/03-BuildingUserExperiences/07-Authorization/01-RenownAuthenticationFlow.md +14 -7
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/03-BuildingUserExperiences/07-Authorization/02-Authorization.md +0 -1
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/03-BuildingUserExperiences/07-Authorization/_category_.json +5 -5
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/03-BuildingUserExperiences/_category_.json +1 -1
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/01-GraphQLAtPowerhouse.md +45 -33
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/02-UsingTheAPI.mdx +61 -18
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/03-UsingSubgraphs.md +50 -54
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/04-analytics-processor.md +126 -110
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/05-RelationalDbProcessor.md +75 -45
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/06-Analytics Engine/GraphQL References/QueryingADocumentWithGraphQL.md +23 -21
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/06-Analytics Engine/best-practices.md +9 -9
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/06-Analytics Engine/graphql/index.md +11 -23
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/06-Analytics Engine/graphql/integration.md +25 -9
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/06-Analytics Engine/intro.md +10 -10
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/06-Analytics Engine/typescript/benchmarks.md +1 -1
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/06-Analytics Engine/typescript/index.md +16 -11
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/06-Analytics Engine/typescript/memory.md +6 -5
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/06-Analytics Engine/typescript/schema.md +2 -2
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/06-Analytics Engine/typescript/utilities.md +7 -5
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/06-Analytics Engine/use-cases/maker.md +32 -58
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/06-Analytics Engine/use-cases/processors.md +1 -1
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/07-drive-analytics.md +105 -71
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/_ARCHIVE-AnalyticsProcessorTutorial/_01-SetupBuilderEnvironment.md +22 -0
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/_ARCHIVE-AnalyticsProcessorTutorial/_02-CreateNewPowerhouseProject.md +9 -8
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/_ARCHIVE-AnalyticsProcessorTutorial/_03-GenerateAnAnalyticsProcessor.md +28 -32
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/_ARCHIVE-AnalyticsProcessorTutorial/_04-UpdateAnalyticsProcessor.md +25 -26
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/_ARCHIVE-AnalyticsProcessorTutorial/_category_.json +1 -1
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/04-WorkWithData/_category_.json +7 -7
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/05-Launch/01-IntroductionToPackages.md +3 -4
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/05-Launch/02-PublishYourProject.md +69 -45
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/05-Launch/03-SetupEnvironment.md +70 -40
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/05-Launch/04-ConfigureEnvironment.md +1 -0
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/05-Launch/_category_.json +7 -7
- package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/_category_.json +6 -6
- package/docs/academy/03-ExampleUsecases/Chatroom/02-CreateNewPowerhouseProject.md +5 -3
- package/docs/academy/03-ExampleUsecases/Chatroom/03-DefineChatroomDocumentModel.md +38 -37
- package/docs/academy/03-ExampleUsecases/Chatroom/04-ImplementOperationReducers.md +45 -41
- package/docs/academy/03-ExampleUsecases/Chatroom/05-ImplementChatroomEditor.md +14 -14
- package/docs/academy/03-ExampleUsecases/Chatroom/06-LaunchALocalReactor.md +6 -6
- package/docs/academy/03-ExampleUsecases/Chatroom/_category_.json +1 -1
- package/docs/academy/04-APIReferences/00-PowerhouseCLI.md +14 -7
- package/docs/academy/04-APIReferences/01-ReactHooks.md +177 -129
- package/docs/academy/04-APIReferences/04-RelationalDatabase.md +121 -113
- package/docs/academy/04-APIReferences/05-PHDocumentMigrationGuide.md +48 -41
- package/docs/academy/04-APIReferences/_category_.json +6 -6
- package/docs/academy/05-Architecture/00-PowerhouseArchitecture.md +1 -2
- package/docs/academy/05-Architecture/01-WorkingWithTheReactor.md +11 -8
- package/docs/academy/05-Architecture/05-DocumentModelTheory/_category_.json +1 -1
- package/docs/academy/05-Architecture/_category_.json +6 -6
- package/docs/academy/06-ComponentLibrary/00-DocumentEngineering.md +25 -23
- package/docs/academy/06-ComponentLibrary/02-CreateCustomScalars.md +105 -93
- package/docs/academy/06-ComponentLibrary/03-IntegrateIntoAReactComponent.md +1 -0
- package/docs/academy/06-ComponentLibrary/_category_.json +7 -7
- package/docs/academy/07-Cookbook.md +267 -34
- package/docs/academy/08-Glossary.md +7 -1
- package/docs/bookofpowerhouse/01-Overview.md +2 -2
- package/docs/bookofpowerhouse/02-GeneralFrameworkAndPhilosophy.md +1 -7
- package/docs/bookofpowerhouse/03-PowerhouseSoftwareArchitecture.md +10 -7
- package/docs/bookofpowerhouse/04-DevelopmentApproaches.md +10 -4
- package/docs/bookofpowerhouse/05-SNOsandANewModelForOSSandPublicGoods.md +23 -30
- package/docs/bookofpowerhouse/06-SNOsInActionAndPlatformEconomies.md +0 -7
- package/docusaurus.config.ts +64 -66
- package/package.json +1 -1
- package/scripts/generate-combined-cli-docs.ts +43 -13
- package/sidebars.ts +1 -0
- package/src/components/HomepageFeatures/index.tsx +171 -78
- package/src/components/HomepageFeatures/styles.module.css +1 -2
- package/src/css/custom.css +89 -89
- package/src/pages/_archive-homepage.tsx +17 -16
- package/src/theme/DocCardList/index.tsx +9 -8
- package/static.json +6 -6
package/docs/academy/02-MasteryTrack/03-BuildingUserExperiences/01-BuildingDocumentEditors.md
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### Development environment
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Connect Studio is your primary tool for development.
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Connect Studio is your primary tool for development.
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When you run `ph connect`, it provides a dynamic, local environment where you can define and preview your document models and their editors live. This replaces the need for tools like Storybook for editor development, though Storybook remains invaluable for exploring the [Powerhouse Component Library](#powerhouse-component-library).
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Key aspects of the Powerhouse development environment:
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- **React Foundation**: Build your editor UIs using React components, just as you would in any standard React project.
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- **Automatic Build Processes**: Tailwind CSS is installed by default and fully managed by Connect Studio. There's no need to manually configure or run Tailwind or other build processes during development. Connect Studio handles CSS generation and other necessary build steps automatically, especially when you publish a package.
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- **Styling Flexibility**: You are not limited to Tailwind. Regular CSS (`.css` files), inline styles, and any React-compatible styling method work exactly as you would expect.
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Powerhouse aims to keep your developer experience clean, familiar, and focused:
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- Build React components as you normally would.
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- Use styling approaches you're comfortable with.
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- Trust Connect Studio to handle the setup and build processes for you.
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If you want a refresher on how to define your document model specification please read the chapter on [specifying the State Schema](/academy/MasteryTrack/DocumentModelCreation/SpecifyTheStateSchema)
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For example, to generate an editor for a To-do List document model with a document type `powerhouse/todolist`:
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```bash
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ph generate --editor ToDoList --document-types powerhouse/todolist
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```
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This will create the template in the `editors/to-do-list/editor.tsx` folder.
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### Styling your editor
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1. **Default HTML Styling**: Standard HTML tags (`<h1>`, `<p>`, `<button>`, etc.) will render with default browser styles or any base styling provided by the Connect environment. This is suitable for basic structure and quick prototyping.
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2. **Tailwind CSS**: Connect Studio comes with Tailwind CSS integrated. You can directly use Tailwind utility classes in your JSX for rapid and consistent styling without writing separate CSS files.
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_Example (from the ToDoList Editor):_
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```typescript
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<div className="container mx-auto p-4 max-w-md">
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<h1 className="text-2xl font-bold mb-4">ToDoList</h1>
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```
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3. **Custom CSS Files**: You can import traditional CSS files (`.css`) to apply custom styles or integrate existing style libraries.
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_Create an `editor.css` file in your editor's directory:_
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```css
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/* editors/your-editor/editor.css */
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.editor-container {
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padding: 1rem;
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border: 1px solid #ccc;
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}
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.editor-title {
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color: navy;
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font-size: 1.8rem;
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}
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```
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_Import and use it in your `editor.tsx`:_
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```typescript
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import './editor.css'; // Import the CSS file
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Choose the method or combination of methods that best suits your project needs and team preferences. Connect Studio (`ph connect`) will allow you to see your styles applied in real-time.
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:::warning **Best practices for consistent reliable styles**
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In any package the styles are being generated through the styles.css file with the help of the tailwindcss/cli package.
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In any package the styles are being generated through the styles.css file with the help of the tailwindcss/cli package.
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**1. Centralize style imports**
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- When installing a package with `ph install` on any instance, package styles are automatically added to styles.css. This ensures production builds always include the required package styles.
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### State management in editors
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When you build an editor in Powerhouse, your main editor component receives `EditorProps`. These props are crucial for interacting with the document:
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- **`document`**: This object contains the entire document structure, including its current state. You'll typically access the global document state via `document.state.global`.
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- **`dispatch`**: This function is your gateway to modifying the document's state. You call `dispatch` with an action object (usually created by action creators from your document model's generated code) to signal an intended change.
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- **Local Component State**: For UI-specific state that doesn't need to be part of the persisted document model (e.g., the current text in an input field before submission, visibility of a dropdown), use React's `useState` hook.
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```typescript
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const [inputValue, setInputValue] = useState('');
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// ...
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<input value={inputValue} onChange={(e) => setInputValue(e.target.value)} />
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```
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- **Global Document State**: For data that is part of the document itself and should be saved (e.g., the items in a to-do list), you modify it by dispatching actions. The `document.state.global` object provides read-only access to this state within your editor.
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**Dispatching Actions:**
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```typescript
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// Assuming 'actions' are imported from your document model
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// import { actions } from '../../document-models/to-do-list/index.js';
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// };
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// }
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```
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The actual state modification logic resides in your document model's reducers, ensuring that all changes are consistent and follow the defined operations.
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## Powerhouse component library
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Powerhouse provides a rich set of reusable UI components through the **`@powerhousedao/document-engineering/scalars`** package. These components are designed for consistency, efficiency, and seamless integration with the Powerhouse ecosystem, with many based on GraphQL scalar types. For more information read our chapter on the [Component Library](/academy/ComponentLibrary/DocumentEngineering)
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### Exploring components
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You can explore available components, see usage examples, and understand their properties (props) using our Storybook instance:
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[https://storybook.powerhouse.academy](https://storybook.powerhouse.academy)
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Storybook allows you to:
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- Visually inspect each component.
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- Interact with different states and variations.
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- View code snippets for basic implementation.
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- Consult the props table for detailed configuration options.
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### Using components
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1. **Import**: Add an import statement at the top of your editor file:
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```typescript
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import {
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Checkbox,
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StringField,
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Form,
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} from "@powerhousedao/document-engineering/scalars";
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```
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2. **Implement**: Use the component in your JSX, configuring it with props:
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```typescript
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## Build a To-do List editor
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In this final part of our tutorial we will continue with the interface or editor implementation of the **To-do List** document model. This means you will create a simple user interface for the **To-do List** document model which will be used inside the Connect app to create, update and delete your To-do List items, but also dispaly the statistics we've implemented in our reducers.
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In this final part of our tutorial we will continue with the interface or editor implementation of the **To-do List** document model. This means you will create a simple user interface for the **To-do List** document model which will be used inside the Connect app to create, update and delete your To-do List items, but also dispaly the statistics we've implemented in our reducers.
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## Generate the editor template
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Run the command below to generate the editor template for the **To-do List** document model.
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Run the command below to generate the editor template for the **To-do List** document model.
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This command reads the **To-do List** document model definition from the `document-models` folder and generates the editor template in the `editors/to-do-list` folder as `editor.tsx`.
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Notice the `--editor` flag which specifies the **To-do List** document model, and the `--document-types` flag defines the document type `powerhouse/todolist`.
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You can explore available components, see usage examples, and understand their properties (props) using our Storybook instance. For a detailed guide on how to leverage the Document Engineering design system and Storybook, see [Using the Powerhouse Document Engineering](/academy/ComponentLibrary/DocumentEngineering) page.
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Below is the complete code for the To-Do List editor. It primarily uses Tailwind CSS for styling and imports the local `Checkbox` and `InputField` components you created in the previous step. These local components, in turn, utilize elements from the Powerhouse Document Engineering design system.
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Now you can run the Connect app and see the **To-do List** editor in action.
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In Connect, in the bottom right corner you'll find a new Document Model that you can create: **To-do List**. Click on it to create a new To-do List document.
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The editor will update dynamically, so you can play around with your editor styling while seeing your results appear in Connect Studio.
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The editor will update dynamically, so you can play around with your editor styling while seeing your results appear in Connect Studio.
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If you managed to follow this tutorial until this point, you have successfully implemented the **To-do List** document model with its reducer operations and editor.
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## Up Next
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Now you can move on to creating a [custom drive explorer](/academy/MasteryTrack/BuildingUserExperiences/BuildingADriveExplorer) for your To-do List document.
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Now you can move on to creating a [custom drive explorer](/academy/MasteryTrack/BuildingUserExperiences/BuildingADriveExplorer) for your To-do List document.
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Imagine you have many To-do Lists sitting in a drive. A custom drive explorer will allow you to organize and track them at a glance, opening up a new world of possibilities to increase the functionality of your documents!
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# Configure a drive
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A drive in Powerhouse is a container for documents and data. It's a place where you can organize and store your documents and share them with others. This guide walks you through configuring and managing drives in your Powerhouse environment.
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A drive in Powerhouse is a container for documents and data. It's a place where you can organize and store your documents and share them with others. This guide walks you through configuring and managing drives in your Powerhouse environment.
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A local drive is a container for local documents and data, hosted on your local machine. Technically, a drive is itself a document that contains a list of the documents inside it. When you run Connect locally with `ph connect`, a local drive is automatically added. You can also create a new local drive by clicking **'Create New Drive'** in Connect.
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**Powerhouse Reactors** are the nodes in the network that store and synchronize documents and drives, resolve conflicts, and rerun operations to verify document event histories.
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**Powerhouse Reactors** are the nodes in the network that store and synchronize documents and drives, resolve conflicts, and rerun operations to verify document event histories.
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A drive uses a reactor and its underlying storage layer. A reactor is the low-level component that enables the synchronization of documents and drives.
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A drive uses a reactor and its underlying storage layer. A reactor is the low-level component that enables the synchronization of documents and drives.
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### Drive apps
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**Drive Explorers** (also known as Drive Apps) are specialized interfaces that enhance how users interact with documents within a drive. As mentioned, a drive is technically just another document containing a list of other documents. This means you can create a custom editor for your drive document.
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**Drive Explorers** (also known as Drive Apps) are specialized interfaces that enhance how users interact with documents within a drive. As mentioned, a drive is technically just another document containing a list of other documents. This means you can create a custom editor for your drive document.
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These customized editors are called Drive Explorers or Drive Apps. They provide custom views, organization tools, and interactive features tailored to specific use cases. For example, a Drive Explorer might present data as a Kanban board, provide aggregated insights, or offer specialized widgets for data processing.
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These customized editors are called Drive Explorers or Drive Apps. They provide custom views, organization tools, and interactive features tailored to specific use cases. For example, a Drive Explorer might present data as a Kanban board, provide aggregated insights, or offer specialized widgets for data processing.
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To learn more about building and customizing Drive Explorers, check out our [Building a Drive Explorer](/academy/MasteryTrack/BuildingUserExperiences/BuildingADriveExplorer) guide.
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## Creating a new drive
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4. Choose the location for your drive: **Local** (only available to you), **Cloud** (available to people in this drive), or **Public** (available to everyone).
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You can also add a new remote drive to your Connect environment programmatically using GraphQL mutations. This is especially useful for automation, scripting, or integrating with external systems.
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### 1. **Navigate to the GraphQL Playground or use a GraphQL client**
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```graphql title="Create Drive Mutation"
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mutation Mutation(
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$slug: String
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) {
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addDrive(name: $name, icon: $icon, id: $addDriveId, slug: $slug) {
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- These are the example variables, feel free to change these as you like and add a different name or logo for your drive:
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```json title="Example Variables"
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{
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"addDriveId": null,
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```
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- You can also provide a custom `id` or `slug` if needed.
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### 3. **Execute the Mutation**
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- Run the mutation. On success, you will receive a response containing the new drive's `icon`, `id`, `name`, and `slug`:
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```json title="Successful Response"
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{
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"data": {
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"addDrive": {
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"id": "6461580b-d317-4596-942d-f6b3d1bfc8fd",
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"name": "AcademyTest",
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"slug": "6461580b-d317-4596-942d-f6b3d1bfc8fd"
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```
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### 4. **Construct the Drive URL**
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- Once you have the `id` or `slug`, you can construct the drive URL for Connect:
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- Format: `domain/d/<driveId>` or `domain/d/<driveSlug>`
|
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- Depending on whether you are using a hosted or a local environment, the domain in your URL will change.
|
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- Example: `https://connect.phd/d/6461580b-d317-4596-942d-f6b3d1bfc8fd`
|
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- Example: `https://localhost:4001/d/6461580b-d317-4596-942d-f6b3d1bfc8fd`
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### 5. **Add the Drive in Connect**
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|
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|
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+
- Use the constructed URL to add or access the drive in your Connect environment via the 'Add Drive' button.
|
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<figure className="image-container">
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<img src={require("./images/AddDrive.png").default} alt="Create a new drive" />
|
|
@@ -138,11 +152,12 @@ You can also add a new remote drive to your Connect environment programmatically
|
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This approach allows you to automate drive creation and integration with other systems, making it easy to manage drives at scale.
|
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## Up next
|
|
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## Up next
|
|
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|
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You've now experienced the use of GraphQL to modify or read data captured in Powerhouse for the first time.
|
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You've now experienced the use of GraphQL to modify or read data captured in Powerhouse for the first time.
|
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You can now either continue with:
|
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|
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|
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+
- User interfaces and [build a custom drive experiences](/academy/MasteryTrack/BuildingUserExperiences/BuildingADriveExplorer)
|
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- Keep playing with data and the [Switchboard API](/academy/MasteryTrack/WorkWithData/UsingTheAPI)
|
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163
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Enjoy!
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