Code sharing
If you are using the player, a common desire is to share the code with your Remotion Studio and/or server-side rendering. With the correct setup, you can write the component once and use it for previewing, displaying and rendering.
Remotion and your React app use a different Webpack config. Therefore, if you want to override your Webpack configuration, you need to override both the Remotion one and the React app one.
Setup
Set up a React project with your preferred setup from the Official React docs. Popular choices are:
While you can still use Create React App, it is not being actively recommended by the React team anymore.
When your project is setup, add the necessary Remotion dependencies:
- npm
- yarn
- pnpm
bash
npm i remotion @remotion/cli @remotion/player
bash
npm i remotion @remotion/cli @remotion/player
bash
pnpm i remotion @remotion/cli @remotion/player
bash
pnpm i remotion @remotion/cli @remotion/player
bash
yarn add remotion @remotion/cli @remotion/player
bash
yarn add remotion @remotion/cli @remotion/player
Afterwards, create a subfolder for Remotion within your project and add three files: An index file, a Root.tsx
file for your list of compositions, and a file with your composition. It could look like this:
diff
└── src/+ ├── remotion/+ │ ├── index.ts+ │ ├── MyComp.tsx+ │ └── Root.tsx└── app/└── App.tsx
diff
└── src/+ ├── remotion/+ │ ├── index.ts+ │ ├── MyComp.tsx+ │ └── Root.tsx└── app/└── App.tsx
Your composition (remotion/MyComp.tsx
in the example) could look for example like this:
tsx
export constMyComp :React .FC <{text : string }> = ({text }) => {return <div >Hello {text }!</div >;};
tsx
export constMyComp :React .FC <{text : string }> = ({text }) => {return <div >Hello {text }!</div >;};
Your list of videos (remotion/Root.tsx
in the example) could look like this:
tsx
import {Composition } from "remotion";import {MyComp } from "./MyComp";export constMyVideo = () => {return (<><Composition component ={MyComp }durationInFrames ={120}width ={1920}height ={1080}fps ={30}id ="my-comp"defaultProps ={{text : "World" }}/></>);};
tsx
import {Composition } from "remotion";import {MyComp } from "./MyComp";export constMyVideo = () => {return (<><Composition component ={MyComp }durationInFrames ={120}width ={1920}height ={1080}fps ={30}id ="my-comp"defaultProps ={{text : "World" }}/></>);};
Your index file (remotion/index.ts
in the example) could look like this:
tsx
import { registerRoot } from "remotion";import { MyVideo } from "./Video";registerRoot(MyVideo);
tsx
import { registerRoot } from "remotion";import { MyVideo } from "./Video";registerRoot(MyVideo);
Don't move these statements together into one file, as you might break hot reloading.
Using the Remotion Studio
You can open the Remotion Studio using the npx remotion studio
command:
bash
npx remotion studio src/remotion/index.ts
bash
npx remotion studio src/remotion/index.ts
Before v4.0, the command was npx remotion preview
.
We recommend adding a new script into your package.json for easy access:
diff
"scripts": {+ "video": "remotion studio src/remotion/index.ts"}
diff
"scripts": {+ "video": "remotion studio src/remotion/index.ts"}
Adding <Player />
to your app
Anywhere in your app, import the <Player />
component and your Composition component.
tsx
import {Player } from "@remotion/player";import {MyComp } from "./remotion/MyComp";export constApp :React .FC = () => {return (<Player component ={MyComp }inputProps ={{text : "World" }}durationInFrames ={120}compositionWidth ={1920}compositionHeight ={1080}fps ={30}style ={{width : 1280,height : 720,}}controls />);};
tsx
import {Player } from "@remotion/player";import {MyComp } from "./remotion/MyComp";export constApp :React .FC = () => {return (<Player component ={MyComp }inputProps ={{text : "World" }}durationInFrames ={120}compositionWidth ={1920}compositionHeight ={1080}fps ={30}style ={{width : 1280,height : 720,}}controls />);};
Pass your React component directly to the component
prop. Don't pass the list of compositions.
If everything worked, you can now run your webapp and preview your video.
Creating a bundle for server-side rendering
In any Node.JS context, you can call bundle()
to bundle your video using Webpack and to server-side render the video. You need to add @remotion/bundler
to your package.json for this.
server.tsxts
importpath from "path";import {bundle } from "@remotion/bundler";constbundled = awaitbundle (path .join (process .cwd (), "src", "remotion", "index.ts"));
server.tsxts
importpath from "path";import {bundle } from "@remotion/bundler";constbundled = awaitbundle (path .join (process .cwd (), "src", "remotion", "index.ts"));
See Server-side rendering for a full example.
When using Lambda, you don't need this, you can use the CLI or deploySite()
which will bundle the video for you.