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Alessio Franceschi
Alessio Franceschi

Posted on • Originally published at alessiofranceschi.me

Making Nested Comments - Building a Real-Time Commenting System in React [Part 2/3]

In the previous part of this series we created the foundations of this project and now we have a basic commenting system where we can create and display comments in real time. This time we're going to add some extra functionalities, like nested comments and markdown support.

Nested Comments

There are a lot of ways to do nested comments and some of them may work better than my method, but for what we need and use (real time updates and Sanity.io as dataset), I found this to be the best approach.

How to do Nested Comments

In the previous post we created a Comment schema which included an array of comments that we called childComments. To add a child comment, we're going to update the parent by appending the child to the array. If we want a nephew comment (never heard of this, but I'm going to use these words together anyway), we will update his parent comment same as before, and then we're going to update the parent comment (the granddad comment) with the updated child. I am confused too just by writing this, but I promise it's going to be easier when we actually start programming this. Long story short, when we add a child comment, we need to update its parent, then its grandparent and so on. This may seem inefficient, and it probably is for huge amounts of comments, but my objective wasn't building the new Facebook commenting system. My approach has some advantages:

  • We greatly reduce calls to the backend, because with a single query we get all the comments;
  • The comments are already nested in the backend, we only need to iterate them, not sort them;
  • Cleaner data in the backend, no need to have references everywhere.

Again, this might seem confusing but it's going to be clearer soon.

Create a Child Comment

Front-End - SingleComment Component

Finally we can code something. First of all, we need to add a Reply button to every comment, so open the SingleComment component. We can simply add the AddComment component, but it's going to be pretty ugly, so we'll add a basic toggle.
Let's add a state for the reply box and a toggle function.

const [showReplyBox, setShowReplyBox] = useState(false);
const toggleReplyBox = () => setShowReplyBox(!showReplyBox);
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Then a button to activate the toggle

<button onClick={toggleReplyBox}>Reply</button>
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And now just add the AddComment component, but with some extra props. As said in the previous section, whenever we add a new child we need to update its parent and its "first parent", basically the first comment in the hierarchy that isn't a child comment. This is needed because of how Sanity.io works. I explain this better and the end of the chapter, just know that if you are using a different dataset you might not need this prop.

{showReplyBox && (
    <AddComment
        parentCommentId={comment._id}
        firstParentId={firstParentId || comment._id}
    />
)}
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parentCommentId is the id of the current comment from where we're generating the child, while we've never seen firstParentId. Basically, this is going to be the id of the "first parent" we mentioned before. We're going to get it from the SingleComment component props, like so:

export  default  function  Comment({  comment,  firstParentId  })  { ... }
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We pass this "first parent" id as prop when rendering the children, like so:

{comment.childComments && (
    <ul>
        {comment.childComments.map(childComment => (
            <Comment
                comment={childComment}
                key={childComment._id}
                firstParentId={firstParentId || comment._id}
            />
        ))}
    </ul>
)}
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How does this work? Basically, when we have to render the first layer of comments (those that are not children comments), we do it in the AllComments component we created in the previous post:

const commentList = comments?.map(comment => {
    return <Comment key={comment._id} comment={comment} />;
});
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Here we pass no firstParentId, meaning that those components have the variable undefined. Because of that, when we render the AddComment or all the child comments, we pass the comment id: firstParentId={firstParentId || comment._id}. Those child comments will have the firstParentId defined and will use that when creating new comments or showing children. This means that no matter how many children there are, they all have the firstCommentId props setted to the id of the first comment in the hierarchy. This sounds complicated, but it's just needed to perform an update in the database when we create new comments, because Sanity.io can perform queries only on first level documents. If we have nested documents, like we do, even if those documents have an _id, a _key and a _type, they still can't be "searchable". That's why we have to do all of this "first parent" thing.

One last thing, let's add a custom class in case the comment is a child, so that later we can style it accordingly.

<li
    key={comment._id}
    id={comment._id}
    className={firstParentId ? "child" : ""}
>
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Front-End - AddCommentForm Component

We now need to modify the form to create comments by adding the parent comment id and the first parent id. We can get them from the props and then add them to the data we send to the API endpoint.

export default function AddCommentForm({parentCommentId, firstParentId}){
    ...

    const onSubmit = data => {
        setIsSending(true);

        if (parentCommentId) {
            data.parentCommentId = parentCommentId;
            data.firstParentId = firstParentId;
        }

        fetch("/api/addComment", {
            method: "POST", 
            body: JSON.stringify(data)
            }
        ).then(r => {
            if (r.status === 200) {
                setIsSending(false);
            } else // handle errors;
        })
    }

    ...
}
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That's all for this component.

Backend - addComment API

In this serverless function we'll handle the creation of child comments.
As child comments are created differently from parent ones, let's add an if-else statement inside the try block.

try {
    if (doc.parentCommentId) {
        // Remove these values from the document, as they're not expected in the database
        const firstParentId = doc.firstParentId;
        const parentCommentId = doc.parentCommentId;
        delete doc.parentCommentId;
        delete doc.firstParentId;

        appendChildComment(firstParentId, parentCommentId, doc).then(
            () => {
                resolve(
                    res.status(200).json({ message: "Comment Created" })
                );
            }
        );
    } else {
        // If there's no parentCommentId, just create a new comment like before
        writeClient.create(doc).then(() => {
            resolve(
                res.status(200).json({ message: "Comment Created" })
            );
        });
    }
} catch (err) {
    reject(res.status(500).json({ message: String(err) }));
}
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If there's a parent comment id, then it is a child comment. We remove those two variables from the document, otherwise Sanity.io will have problems, and then call a function to append the child comment to the parent comment. The remaining code is the same as before.

Now we need to create the function to actually append the child comment. This function will require 3 parameters: the id of the first parent, the id of the parent comment and the child comment itself.
Inside we get the first parent comment and append the child accordingly.

function appendChildComment(firstParentId, parentCommentId, childComment) {
    return new Promise(async resolve => {
        // Get the first level parent comment
        const query = `*[_type == "comment" && _id == "${firstParentId}"][0]`;
        const parentComment = await writeClient.fetch(query);

        if (!parentComment.childComments) {
            // Parent Comment has no children, just create a new Array with the child comment
            parentComment.childComments = [childComment];
        } else if (parentComment._id === parentCommentId) {
            // Parent Comment is a first level comment, so just append the comment
            parentComment.childComments = [
                ...parentComment.childComments.filter(c => c._id !== childComment._id),
                childComment,
            ];
            // The filter is not necessary right now, but in case you want to add an Edit
            // functionality, you'll need this.
        } else {
            // Parent comment is a level two or more nested comment
            // We need to find the actual parent comment in all nested comments
            const childToUpdate = getChildComment(parentComment, parentCommentId);

            if (!childToUpdate.childComments) {
                // Parent comment has no children, create new Array with the new child
                childToUpdate.childComments = [childComment];
            } else {
                // Parent comment already has some children
                // Append the new childComment
                childToUpdate.childComments = [
                    ...childToUpdate.childComments.filter(
                        c => c._id !== childComment._id
                    ),
                    childComment
                ];
            }
        }

        // Patch the document
        writeClient
            .patch(parentComment._id)
            .set(parentComment)
            .commit()
            .then(() => resolve());
    });
}

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Let's analyze the code block by block.

if (!parentComment.childComments) {
    parentComment.childComments = [childComment];
}
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If the first parent comment has no children, just append the new children in a new array.

else if (parentComment._id === parentCommentId) {
    parentComment.childComments = [...parentComment.childComments, childComment];
}
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If the parent is a first parent, meaning that it is not a child itself, append the comment to the other children.

else {
    const childToUpdate = getChildComment(parentComment, parentCommentId);

    if (!childToUpdate.childComments) {
        childToUpdate.childComments = [childComment];
    } else {
        childToUpdate.childComments = [
            ...childToUpdate.childComments.filter(
                c => c._id !== childComment._id
            ),
            childComment
        ];
    }
}
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If we arrive here, the parent is a child itself and so we need to get this parent comment, update it and then patch the first parent comment in the database.
The function getChildComment iterates all children to find the comment we need to update, then the remainder of the code is basically the same as the previous part.

To patch the document we just follow Sanity.io documentation.

The getChildComment function is recursive and will return the comment that needs to be updated.

function getChildComment(firstParentComment, childCommentId) {
    let returnComment = null;
    firstParentComment?.childComments?.forEach(c => {
        if (c._id == childCommentId) {
            returnComment = c;
        } else if (c.childComments) {
            returnComment = getChildComment(c, childCommentId);
        } else {
            return returnComment;
        }
    });
    return returnComment;
}
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And with that done, we finally have nested comments. Styling is out of scope for this articles, but a quick tip is that you can add a margin-left property to the child class to have the child comment slighty moved to the right. As this property is relative to the parent DOM element, we can get a "nested comments" style pretty easily.

Markdown Support

I wanted to add markdown support because I like to make comments readable and walls of text are not great for that, but I didn't want anything too heavy or complicated for the end user.
I ended up using a library called snarkdown. I simply copy-pasted the source code in my project under lib/snarkdown.js to remove support for images and headings because we don't need that.

The final code is as follows:

const TAGS = {
    "": ["<em>", "</em>"],
    _: ["<strong>", "</strong>"],
    "*": ["<strong>", "</strong>"],
    "~": ["<s>", "</s>"],
    "\n": ["<br />"],
    " ": ["<br />"],
    "-": ["<hr />"],
};

/** Outdent a string based on the first indented line's leading whitespace
 *  @private
 */
function outdent(str) {
    return str.replace(
        RegExp("^" + (str.match(/^(\t| )+/) || "")[0], "gm"),
        ""
    );
}

/** Encode special attribute characters to HTML entities in a String.
 *  @private
 */
function encodeAttr(str) {
    return (str + "")
        .replace(/"/g, "&quot;")
        .replace(/</g, "&lt;")
        .replace(/>/g, "&gt;");
}

/** Parse Markdown into an HTML String. */
export default function parse(md, prevLinks) {
    let tokenizer = /((?:^|\n+)(?:\n---+|\* \*(?: \*)+)\n)|(?:^```
{% endraw %}
 *(\w*)\n([\s\S]*?)\n
{% raw %}
```$)|((?:(?:^|\n+)(?:\t|  {2,}).+)+\n*)|((?:(?:^|\n)([>*+-]|\d+\.)\s+.*)+)|(?:!\[([^\]]*?)\]\(([^)]+?)\))|(\[)|(\](?:\(([^)]+?)\))?)|(?:(?:^|\n+)([^\s].*)\n(-{3,}|={3,})(?:\n+|$))|(?:(?:^|\n+)(#{1,6})\s*(.+)(?:\n+|$))|(?:`([^`].*?)`)|(  \n\n*|\n{2,}|__|\*\*|[_*]|~~)/gm,
        context = [],
        out = "",
        links = prevLinks || {},
        last = 0,
        chunk,
        prev,
        token,
        inner,
        t;

    function tag(token) {
        let desc = TAGS[token[1] || ""];
        let end = context[context.length - 1] == token;
        if (!desc) return token;
        if (!desc[1]) return desc[0];
        if (end) context.pop();
        else context.push(token);
        return desc[end | 0];
    }

    function flush() {
        let str = "";
        while (context.length) str += tag(context[context.length - 1]);
        return str;
    }

    md = md
        .replace(/^\[(.+?)\]:\s*(.+)$/gm, (s, name, url) => {
            links[name.toLowerCase()] = url;
            return "";
        })
        .replace(/^\n+|\n+$/g, "");

    while ((token = tokenizer.exec(md))) {
        prev = md.substring(last, token.index);
        last = tokenizer.lastIndex;
        chunk = token[0];
        if (prev.match(/[^\\](\\\\)*\\$/)) {
            // escaped
        }
        // Code/Indent blocks:
        else if ((t = token[3] || token[4])) {
            chunk =
                '<pre class="code ' +
                (token[4] ? "poetry" : token[2].toLowerCase()) +
                '"><code' +
                (token[2]
                    ? ` class="language-${token[2].toLowerCase()}"`
                    : "") +
                ">" +
                outdent(encodeAttr(t).replace(/^\n+|\n+$/g, "")) +
                "</code></pre>";
        }
        // > Quotes, -* lists:
        else if ((t = token[6])) {
            if (t.match(/\./)) {
                token[5] = token[5].replace(/^\d+/gm, "");
            }
            inner = parse(outdent(token[5].replace(/^\s*[>*+.-]/gm, "")));
            if (t == ">") t = "blockquote";
            else {
                t = t.match(/\./) ? "ol" : "ul";
                inner = inner.replace(/^(.*)(\n|$)/gm, "<li>$1</li>");
            }
            chunk = "<" + t + ">" + inner + "</" + t + ">";
        }
        // Links:
        else if (token[10]) {
            out = out.replace(
                "<a>",
                `<a href="${encodeAttr(
                    token[11] || links[prev.toLowerCase()]
                )}">`
            );
            chunk = flush() + "</a>";
        } else if (token[9]) {
            chunk = "<a>";
        }
        // `code`:
        else if (token[16]) {
            chunk = "<code>" + encodeAttr(token[16]) + "</code>";
        }
        // Inline formatting: *em*, **strong** & friends
        else if (token[17] || token[1]) {
            chunk = tag(token[17] || "--");
        }
        out += prev;
        out += chunk;
    }

    return (out + md.substring(last) + flush()).replace(/^\n+|\n+$/g, "");
}
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Now, in components/Comments/SingleComment.js we can parse the comment.

import parser from "../../lib/snarkdown";

...

<p
    className="comment-content"
    dangerouslySetInnerHTML={/{ //remove the slash
        __html: parser(comment.comment.trim()),
    }}
/>
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reCAPTCHA

We're going to interate Google reCAPTCHA to avoid any spammy comments.
First, get an API key from here and add it to your env (this is my suggested method and the most secure one, you can use what you prefer).
Usually we should load the reCAPTCHA javascript in the head of our document, but I prefer to lazy-load things when possible. To do so, install a library I wrote to load the JS file only when e're loading the comments.

npm i @pandasekh/dynamic-script-loader
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Now open the /components/Comments/AllComments.js file. We need to import the library and load reCAPTCHA's javascript in the useEffect hook.

import load from "@pandasekh/dynamic-script-loader";

[...]

    useEffect(async () => {

        [...]

        // Dynamically import Google reCAPTCHA
        load(`https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api.js?render=YOUR_API_KEY`);

        [...]
    }, []);
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Now we have reCAPTCHA ready. Let's modify our AddCommentForm.js so that it generates a token for reCAPTCHA to verify in the backend.

// components/AddComment/AddCommentForm.js

[...]

    const onSubmit = data => {
        setIsSending(true);

        if (parentCommentId) {
            data.parentCommentId = parentCommentId;
            data.firstParentId = firstParentId;
        }

        grecaptcha.ready(() => {
            grecaptcha
                .execute(YOUR_SITE_KEY, {
                    action: "submit",
                })
                .then(token => {
                    data.token = token;
                    fetch("/api/addComment", {
                        method: "POST", 
                        body: JSON.stringify(data)
                        }
                    ).then(r => {
                        if (r.status === 200) {
                            setIsSending(false);
                        } else // handle errors;
                    })
                }
        }
    }

[...]
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And finally, we just have to verify this token in the backend.

// pages/api/sendComment.js

[...]

    const doc = JSON.parse(req.body);

    // Check ReCaptcha Token
    verifyRecaptchaToken(doc.token).then(isValidToken => {
        if (!isValidToken) {
            reject(res.status(406).end());
        }
    });

    delete doc.token;

[...]

function verifyRecaptchaToken(token) {
    return fetch("https://www.google.com/recaptcha/api/siteverify", {
        method: "POST",
        headers: { "Content-Type": "application/x-www-form-urlencoded" },
        body: `secret=${YOUR_SECRET_KEY}&response=${token}`,
    })
        .then(r => r.json())
        .then(j => {
            return j.success;
        });
}

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That's all for this post. In the next one we'll finally add some reactions to our comments!

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