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How to: add Twitter and Instagram Embeds on an Eleventy website using Sanity

In this post, we will walk through the Sanity setup and the Eleventy configuration that makes Twitter and Instagram embeds possible and really simple to use for editors

July 13, 2020

Cover image credits: Photo by Luismi Sánchez on Unsplash

At Orbit, we recently rebuilt our website from the ground up using a Jamstack approach and more specifically using Eleventy as our Static Site Generator and Sanity (https://sanity.io) as our CMS. I’ve talked a bit more about our approach and tech stack in the following Twitter thread:

One thing we wanted to keep from our old blog was the ability to easily embed Tweets or Instagram posts, as they can allow us to provide context, color, or variety to what could otherwise be a wall of text.

An example of an embedded tweet in one of our blog posts

See how this tweet from David breaks up the text nicely?

In this post, we will walk through the Sanity setup and the Eleventy configuration that makes this possible—and even more importantly, really simple to use for editors!

Note: this post is aimed at developers who are already comfortable with both Sanity and Eleventy, as I am not going to explain how to set up either one of these tools. Fortunately, Sanity already has a template handy to get started in minutes!

Step 1: the Sanity Studio setup

Our first order of business will be to teach Sanity what a “Twitter” or “Instagram” block consists of.

As is usually the case in embeds, we’re going to refer to specific tweets or Instagram posts by their ID, visible in their URL:

https://twitter.com/Phacks/status/1281221982613311496 # ID: 1281221982613311496
https://www.instagram.com/p/CB-yYetJ4ky/ # ID: CB-yYetJ4ky

This is the approach taken on DEV, as you would display those Twitter or Instagram embeds with the following Liquid tags:

{% twitter 1281221982613311496 %}
{% instagram CB-yYetJ4ky %}

We can then define our Sanity schemas, saying that both a twitter block and an instagram have only one field, id:

// ./schemas/objects/twitter.js
export default {
  name: 'twitter',
  type: 'object',
  title: 'Twitter Embed',
  fields: [
    {
      name: 'id',
      type: 'string',
      title: 'Twitter tweet ID'
    }
  ]
}
// ./schemas/objects/instagram.js
export default {
  name: 'instagram',
  type: 'object',
  title: 'Instagram Embed',
  fields: [
    {
      name: 'id',
      type: 'string',
      title: 'Instagram post ID'
    }
  ]
}

And import them to the available schemas in Sanity Studio:

// First, we must import the schema creator
import createSchema from 'part:@sanity/base/schema-creator'

// Then import schema types from any plugins that might expose them
import schemaTypes from 'all:part:@sanity/base/schema-type'

import bodyPortableText from './objects/bodyPortableText'

// We import 
import instagram  from './instagram'
import twitter  from './twitter'

// Then we give our schema to the builder and provide the result to Sanity
export default createSchema({
  name: 'default',
  // Then proceed to concatenate our document type
  // to the ones provided by any plugins that are installed
  types: schemaTypes.concat([
    // ... other schemas
    bodyPortableText,
    // Will be available as { type: 'typename' } in bodyPortableText
    instagram,
    twitter
  ])
})

One last step before we can see our new blocks available in Studio: we need to import them into `bodyPortableText`:

// bodyPortableText.js
export default {
  name: 'bodyPortableText',
  type: 'array',
  title: 'Body',
  of: [
    // ... other blocks 
    {
      type: 'twitter'
    },
    {
      type: 'instagram'
    }
  ]
}

We can now see our new blocks right inside Sanity Studio’s editor, nice!

Sanity Studio’s editor now offers two options, Twitter Embed and Instagram Embed

Step 2: previewing embeds in Sanity Studio

The editor experience is not satisfying yet, as there’s little visual feedback on the tweet or the Instagram post that is embedded. This can be solved using previews in Sanity Studio: we’re going to tell Studio how we want those blocks to look like inside the editor.

We won’t reinvent the wheel here and rely on the react-twitter-embed and react-instagram-embed packages to handle the previews for us.

After installing the packages with npm install --save react-twitter-embed react-instagram-embed, let’s define the previews in twitter.js and instagram.js:

// schemas/objects/twitter.js
import React from 'react'
import { TwitterTweetEmbed } from 'react-twitter-embed';

const Preview = ({value}) => {
  const { id } = value
  return (<TwitterTweetEmbed tweetId={id} options={{ conversation: "none" }} />)
}

export default {
  name: 'twitter',
  type: 'object',
  title: 'Twitter Embed',
  fields: [
    {
      name: 'id',
      type: 'string',
      title: 'Twitter tweet id'
    }
  ],
  preview: {
    select: {
       id: 'id'
    },
    component: Preview
  }
}
// schemas/objects/instagram.js
import React from 'react'
import InstagramEmbed from 'react-instagram-embed';

const Preview = ({value}) => {
    const { id } = value
    return (<InstagramEmbed url={`https://www.instagram.com/p/${id}/`} />)
}

export default {
  name: 'instagram',
  type: 'object',
  title: 'Instagram Embed',
  fields: [
    {
      name: 'id',
      type: 'string',
      title: 'Instagram post ID'
    }
  ],
  preview: {
    select: {
      id: 'id'
    },
    component: Preview
  }
}

And there we go! Twitter and Instagram embeds are now nicely displayed inside the editor. Sweet!

A screenshot of the Sanity Studio editor with a Twitter embed

Step 3: displaying embeds in Eleventy

With the ability to add Twitter or Instagram embeds in Sanity Studio, we now turn to our Eleventy setup to try and display them in our blog posts.

Sanity uses a specification called Portable Text to allow editors and developers to extend the semantics of Markdown or HTML and allow for custom blocks of content, like our embeds there.

One way to translate those custom blocks into actual markup for websites is to use a serializer pattern that takes the JSON representation of the blocks as inputs and outputs the proper HTML. For example, here is the serializers.js file that comes with the Sanity Eleventy blog template, which translates the blocks authorReference, code and mainImage:

const imageUrl = require('./imageUrl')

// Learn more on https://www.sanity.io/docs/guides/introduction-to-portable-text
module.exports = {
  types: {
    authorReference: ({node}) => `[${node.name}](/authors/${node.slug.current})`,
    code: ({node}) => '```

' + node.language + '\n' + node.code + '\n

```',
    mainImage: ({node}) => `![${node.alt}](${imageUrl(node).width(600).url()})`
  }
}

Our objective in this section will be to add two new serializers, twitter and instagram, that will take care of rendering the embeds.

Displaying Twitter embeds in Eleventy

We are going to use the official twttr.js library to embed Tweets into our blog posts. We do not reuse twitter-react-embed here, because that would require a React runtime. For performance reasons, it is best to not include a JavaScript framework if one does not really need it.

Following the Twitter documentation, inserting the following Javascript snippet inside our _includes/layout/post.njk template will load the twttr.js library, and turn all <div class="tweet" id="123456789"> nodes into full-blown twitter embeds:

<script>
  if (document.getElementsByClassName('tweet').length > 0) {
    window.twttr = (function (d, s, id) {
      var js,
        fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0],
        t = window.twttr || {}
      if (d.getElementById(id)) return t
      js = d.createElement(s)
      js.id = id
      js.src = 'https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js'
      fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs)

      t._e = []
      t.ready = function (f) {
        t._e.push(f)
      }

      return t
    })(document, 'script', 'twitter-wjs')
  }
</script>

<script>
  if (window.twttr !== undefined) {
    twttr.ready(function (twttr) {
      Array.from(document.getElementsByClassName('tweet')).forEach((tweet) => {
        const id = tweet.getAttribute('id')
        twttr.widgets.createTweet(id, tweet, {
          conversation: 'none', // or all
          cards: 'hidden', // or visible
          linkColor: '#cc0000', // default is blue
          theme: 'light', // or dark
        })
      })
    })
  }
</script>

We can now turn to our serializers.js file and turn each block into the corresponding <div class="tweet" id="<tweetID>"> node:

// utils/serializers.js
module.exports = {
  types: {
    authorReference: // ...
    code: // ...
    mainImage: // ...
    twitter: ({ node }) => `<div id="${node.id}" class="tweet"></div>`,
  }
}

Tada! Tweets that we embed in Sanity Studio are now directly embedded, at the right place, inside our blog posts:

A blog post with a tweet embedded

Displaying Instagram embeds in Eleventy

Instagram embeds will work very similarly to Twitter ones: using the official library, we’ll add a JavaScript snippet that will turn specific DOM nodes into proper Instagram posts.

Following the Instagram documentation, we can append this snippet to the _includes/layout/posts.njk template:

<script>
  Array.from(document.getElementsByClassName('instagram')).forEach(
    async (instagram) => {
      const url = instagram.getAttribute('data-url')
      const response = await fetch(
        `https://api.instagram.com/oembed?url=${url}&maxwidth=480&hidecaption&omitscript`
      )
      const { html } = await response.json()
      // https://stackoverflow.com/a/35385518
      instagram.innerHTML = html
      var tag = document.createElement('script')
      tag.src = '//www.instagram.com/embed.js'
      tag.setAttribute('async', true)
      document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].appendChild(tag)
    }
  )
</script>

and update our serializers.js file accordingly:

// utils/serializers.js
module.exports = {
  types: {
    authorReference: // ...
    code: // ...
    mainImage: // ...
    twitter: ({ node }) => `<div id="${node.id}" class="tweet"></div>`,
    instagram: ({ node }) => `<div data-url="https://www.instagram.com/p/${node.id}" class="instagram"></div>`,
  }
}

We now have Instagram embeds available in our blog posts!

A blog post with an Instagram embed

Conclusion, source code, and further reading

In this article, we learned how to add Twitter and Instagram embeds to Eleventy blog posts using Sanity’s Portable Text capabilities.

The source code for the resulting Eleventy blog and Sanity Studio is available here: https://github.com/phacks/sanity-eleventy-twitter-instagram-embed.

Should you want to dig further on the topic, I can recommend the following resources:

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