Block Types & Properties
A block's type affects how it looks and behaves in the editor. Each type also comes with its own set of properties, each having a string value, which further affect the block's appearance and behaviour.
Built-In Block Types
BlockNote includes a number of built-in block types, each with their own set of properties. You can see how they look, both in the editor, and in code using Block
objects:
Paragraph
Appearance
Type & Props
type ParagraphBlock = {
id: string;
type: "paragraph";
props: DefaultBlockProps;
content: InlineContent[];
children: Block[];
};
Heading
Appearance
Type & Props
type HeadingBlock = {
id: string;
type: "heading";
props: {
level: "1" | "2" | "3" = "1";
} & DefaultBlockProps;
content: InlineContent[];
children: Block[];
};
level:
The heading level, representing a title (level: "1"
), heading (level: "2"
), and subheading (level: "3"
).
Bullet List Item
Appearance
Type & Props
type BulletListItemBlock = {
id: string;
type: "bulletListItem";
props: DefaultBlockProps;
content: InlineContent[];
children: Block[];
};
Numbered List Item
Appearance
Type & Props
type NumberedListItemBlock = {
id: string;
type: "numberedListItem";
props: DefaultBlockProps;
content: InlineContent[];
children: Block[];
};
Default Block Properties
While each type of block can have its own set of properties, there are some properties that all built-in block types have by default, which you can find in the definition for DefaultBlockProps
:
type DefaultBlockProps = {
backgroundColor: string = "default";
textColor: string = "default";
textAlignment: "left" | "center" | "right" | "justify" = "left";
};
backgroundColor:
The background color of the block, which also applies to nested blocks.
textColor:
The text color of the block, which also applies to nested blocks.
textAlignment:
The text alignment of the block.
Custom Block Types
In addition to the default block types that BlockNote offers, you can also make your own custom blocks. Take a look at the demo below, in which we add a custom block containing an image and caption to a BlockNote editor, as well as a custom Slash Menu Item to insert it.
INFO
While custom blocks open a lot of doors for what you can do with BlockNote, we're still working on the API and there are a few limitations for the kinds of blocks you can create.
We'd love to hear your feedback on Github or in our Discord community!
Creating a Custom Block Type
To define a custom block type, we use the createReactBlockSpec
function, for which you can see the definition below:
type PropSchema = Record<
string,
{
default: string;
values?: string[];
};
>
function createReactBlockSpec(config: {
type: string;
propSchema: PropSchema;
containsInlineContent: boolean;
render: (props: {
block: Block,
editor: BlockNoteEditor
}) => JSX.Element;
}): BlockType;
Let's look at our custom image block from the demo, and go over each field in-depth to explain how it works:
const ImageBlock = createReactBlockSpec({
type: "image",
propSchema: {
src: {
default: "https://via.placeholder.com/1000",
},
},
containsInlineContent: true,
render: ({ block }) => (
<div
style={{
display: "flex",
flexDirection: "column",
}}>
<img
style={{
width: "100%",
}}
src={block.props.src}
alt={"Image"}
contentEditable={false}
/>
<InlineContent />
</div>
),
});
type
Defines the name of the block, in this case, image
.
propSchema
This is an object which defines the props that the block should have. In this case, we want the block to have a src
prop for the URL of the image, so we add a src
key. We also want basic styling options for the image block, so we also add the Default Block Properties using defaultProps
. The value of each key is an object with a mandatory default
field and an optional values
field:
default:
Stores the prop's default value, so we use a placeholder image URL for src
if no URL is provided.
values:
Stores an array of strings that the prop can take. If values
is not defined, BlockNote assumes the prop can be any string, which makes sense for src
, since it can be any image URL.
containsInlineContent
As we saw in Block Objects, blocks can contain editable rich text which is represented as Inline Content. The containsInlineContent
field allows your custom block to contain an editable rich-text field. For the custom image block, we use an inline content field to create our caption, so it's set to true
.
render
This is a React component which defines how your custom block should be rendered in the editor, and takes two props:
block:
The block that should be rendered.
editor:
The BlockNote editor instance that the block is in.
For our custom image block, we use a parent div
which contains the image and caption. Since block
will always be an image
block, we also know it contains a src
prop, and can pass it to the child img
element.
But what's this InlineContent
component? Since we set containsInlineContent
to true
, it means we want to include an editable rich-text field somewhere in the image block. You should use the InlineContent
component to represent this field in your render
component. Since we're using it to create our caption, we add it below the img
element.
In the DOM, the InlineContent
component is rendered as a div
by default, but you can make it use a different element by passing as={"elementTag"}
as a prop. For example, as={"p"}
will make the InlineContent
component get rendered to a paragraph.
While the InlineContent
component can be put anywhere inside the component you pass to render
, you should make sure to only have one. If containsInlineContent
is set to false, render
shouldn't contain any.
Adding Custom Blocks to the Editor
Now, we need to tell BlockNote to use our custom image block by passing it to the editor in the blockSchema
option. Let's again look at the image block from the demo as an example:
// Creates a new editor instance.
const editor = useBlockNote({
// Tells BlockNote which blocks to use.
blockSchema: {
// Adds all default blocks.
...defaultBlockSchema,
// Adds the custom image block.
image: ImageBlock,
},
});
Since we still want the editor to use the Built-In Block Types, we add defaultBlockSchema
to our custom block schema. The key which we use for the custom image block is the same string we use for its type. Make sure that this is always the case for your own custom blocks.
And we're done! You now know how to create custom blocks and add them to the editor. Head to Manipulating Blocks to see what you can do with them in the editor.