Template expressions reference
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Astro component syntax is a superset of HTML. The syntax was designed to feel familiar to anyone with experience writing HTML or JSX, and adds support for including components and JavaScript expressions.
JSX-like Expressions
Section titled JSX-like ExpressionsYou can define local JavaScript variables inside of the frontmatter component script between the two code fences (---
) of an Astro component. You can then inject these variables into the component’s HTML template using JSX-like expressions!
Using this approach, you can include dynamic values that are calculated in the frontmatter. But once included, these values are not reactive and will never change. Astro components are templates that only run once, during the rendering step.
See below for more examples of differences between Astro and JSX.
Variables
Section titled VariablesLocal variables can be added into the HTML using the curly braces syntax:
Dynamic Attributes
Section titled Dynamic AttributesLocal variables can be used in curly braces to pass attribute values to both HTML elements and components:
HTML attributes will be converted to strings, so it is not possible to pass functions and objects to HTML elements. For example, you can’t assign an event handler to an HTML element in an Astro component:
Instead, use a client-side script to add the event handler, like you would in vanilla JavaScript:
Dynamic HTML
Section titled Dynamic HTMLLocal variables can be used in JSX-like functions to produce dynamically-generated HTML elements:
Astro can conditionally display HTML using JSX logical operators and ternary expressions.
Dynamic Tags
Section titled Dynamic TagsYou can also use dynamic tags by assigning an HTML tag name to a variable or with a component import reassignment:
When using dynamic tags:
-
Variable names must be capitalized. For example, use
Element
, notelement
. Otherwise, Astro will try to render your variable name as a literal HTML tag. -
Hydration directives are not supported. When using
client:*
hydration directives, Astro needs to know which components to bundle for production, and the dynamic tag pattern prevents this from working. -
The define:vars directive is not supported. If you cannot wrap the children with an extra element (e.g
<div>
), then you can manually add astyle={`--myVar:${value}`}
to your Element.
Fragments
Section titled FragmentsAstro supports <> </>
notation and also provides a built-in <Fragment />
component. This component can be useful to avoid wrapper elements when adding set:*
directives to inject an HTML string.
The following example renders paragraph text using the <Fragment />
component:
Differences between Astro and JSX
Section titled Differences between Astro and JSXAstro component syntax is a superset of HTML. It was designed to feel familiar to anyone with HTML or JSX experience, but there are a couple of key differences between .astro
files and JSX.
Attributes
Section titled AttributesIn Astro, you use the standard kebab-case
format for all HTML attributes instead of the camelCase
used in JSX. This even works for class
, which is not supported by React.
Multiple Elements
Section titled Multiple ElementsAn Astro component template can render multiple elements with no need to wrap everything in a single <div>
or <>
, unlike JavaScript or JSX.
Comments
Section titled CommentsIn Astro, you can use standard HTML comments or JavaScript-style comments.
HTML-style comments will be included in browser DOM, while JS ones will be skipped. To leave TODO messages or other development-only explanations, you may wish to use JavaScript-style comments instead.
Component utilities
Section titled Component utilitiesAstro.slots
Section titled Astro.slotsAstro.slots
contains utility functions for modifying an Astro component’s slotted children.
Astro.slots.has()
Section titled Astro.slots.has()Type: (slotName: string) => boolean
You can check whether content for a specific slot name exists with Astro.slots.has()
. This can be useful when you want to wrap slot contents but only want to render the wrapper elements when the slot is being used.
Astro.slots.render()
Section titled Astro.slots.render()Type: (slotName: string, args?: any[]) => Promise<string>
You can asynchronously render the contents of a slot to a string of HTML using Astro.slots.render()
.
This is for advanced use cases! In most circumstances, it is simpler to render slot contents with the <slot />
element.
Astro.slots.render()
optionally accepts a second argument: an array of parameters that will be forwarded to any function children. This can be useful for custom utility components.
For example, this <Shout />
component converts its message
prop to uppercase and passes it to the default slot:
A callback function passed as <Shout />
’s child will receive the all-caps message
parameter:
Callback functions can be passed to named slots inside a wrapping HTML element tag with a slot
attribute. This element is only used to transfer the callback to a named slot and will not be rendered onto the page.
Use a standard HTML element for the wrapping tag or any lowercase tag (e.g. <fragment>
instead of <Fragment />
) that will not be interpreted as a component. Do not use the HTML <slot>
element as this will be interpreted as an Astro slot.
Astro.self
Section titled Astro.selfAstro.self
allows Astro components to be recursively called. This behavior lets you render an Astro component from within itself by using <Astro.self>
in the component template. This can help iterate over large data stores and nested data structures.
This component could then be used like this:
And would render HTML like this:
Reference