As full-stack developers, we often love to develop applications out of the box with tools that can visually design your application's UI and define your data and API layers that can seamlessly integrate with the application's UI.
AWS Amplify Studio amplifies your development with front-end and back-end by provisioning the right AWS resources under the hood for the right purposes and also the ability to easily integrate into the design.
Working with data
Amplify Studio makes it really easy to define and manage your data irrespective of the environment it's used in.
Defining your data
Amplify Studio's Data allows you to define Amazon DynamoDB keeping in mind the properties with the right type and also powered with AWS AppSync where which generates a GraphQL schema under the hood.
enum TopicLevelEnum {
INTRODUCTORY
INTERMEDIATE
ADVANCE
}
type InfoCard @model @auth(rules: [{allow: public}]) {
id: ID!
title: String!
short_description: String!
long_description: String!
thumbnail_url: AWSURL!
categories: [String!]
services: [String!]
topic_level: TopicLevelEnum
aws_docs_url: String!
aws_workshow_url: String
community_url: String
aws_samples_url: String
dislikes: Int
url: String
s3_thumbnail: String
likes: Int
}
type Service @model @auth(rules: [{allow: public}]) {
id: ID!
service_name: String!
category_name: String!
logo_url: AWSURL!
url: String
s3_logo: String
}
Now that data is defined and the AWS resources - AppSync API and DynamoDB tables for the same are created with @model
directives by AppSync. Since the API is using public read, @auth(rules: [{allow: public}])
is part InfoCard
and Service
this will ensure that the auto-generated CRUD APIs for them will allow public access.
Generating data
The content management feature of Amplify Studio is elegant for ensuring an admin/content creator role to create or update content that the front-end application would be consuming. This uses the data definition based on your GraphQL schema and DynamoDB schema with a form-based input.
Amplify Studio also has an underrated feature that developers would love when using this during the course of development, Amplify Studio has auto-generate data which is handy for the development phase where developers need not worry about "there isn't enough data to display on the front-end" instead generate up to 100 records with the feasibility of setting some constraints so that you get valid data.
Test your data
With the data populated, you would need to ensure the GraphQL APIs with AppSync are working as expected. Amplify Studio also features a GraphQL editor to simulate and test the APIs.
The simulator provides the API docs - where you can navigate the different queries
, mutations
or subscription
.
Amplify Storage
Amplify Storage let's you manage the media files and assets which are stored on Amazon S3. Amplify Storage will first create the Amazon S3 bucket where you can set the authorization rules for user to upload
, view
or delete
the objects (files in this case) on S3 bucket.
Managing files on Storage
From Amplify Storage, you can navigate across different levels of folders and files and upload the files or create folders. Amplify Studio also provides your with a snippet of code that uses Storage APIs to get the file.
const file = await Storage.get("aws-amplify/auth/aws-amplify-auth.md", {
level: "public"
});
Figma design to code
Using the getting started Figma design from the community and the components available in this design uses the design guidelines which is a subset of AWS Amplify UI Kit that has a collection of UI components for different UI frameworks both web and mobile.
With my limited knowledge of Figma designing and using the pre-defined components and modifying the components as per my requirement, I've successfully created three components - ServiceCard
, FeatureCard
and InfoCardDetails
.
On successfully authorizing AWS Amplify Studio to access Figma designs from my Figma account, the UI Library on Amplify Studio lists all the components ready to be configured and imported into your Amplify project.
Component configuration
FeatureCard
is now ready to be configured with the data that is defined. Amplify Studio provides a tree for all the elements created in this component and configuring different component properties.
Firstly, map the component to the data model that is used in the component.
Set each of the child properties with the data from the defined data model. In the above screenshot, you can see the title of the card is set with infoCard.Title
to the label
property of the child component.
In case of InfoCardDetails
component, the data model defines URLs for documentation, samples and workshop. For those to be functional as a button onClick
event, Amplify Studio allows those configurations where you can specify the target by selecting Open URL in new tab
and also mapping the equivalent data from InfoCard
data model.
Collection components
In the component configuration page, click on Create collection button.
The collections can be configured with properties that can make the collections UI really customizable in terms of how they would appear as a - List
or Grid
, ordering, spacing, alignment, enabling search
functionality in the collection and also pagination
with the page size.
The collections could also be configured with filters
which are applied to the collections and also define the sort
conditions.
Sync Amplify Studio with local IDE
With the data and UI configurations done on Amplify Studio, these changes can be synced to your local IDE with Amplify CLI.
amplify pull --appId your-amplify-project-id --envName your-env
This will create all the amplify
related files in your local project folder with amplify
backed and resources configurations under /amplify
folder. In your src
folder, the UI components and data model related files are generated in /ui-components
folder and /models
folder respectively.
Importing and using components
Installing the needed npm dependencies.
npm install -g @aws-amplify/cli
npm install aws-amplify @aws-amplify/ui-react
In index.js
file, configure Amplify.
import { ThemeProvider } from "@aws-amplify/ui-react";
import { Amplify } from 'aws-amplify';
import awsconfig from './aws-exports';
import "@aws-amplify/ui-react/styles.css";
import { studioTheme } from "./ui-components";
Amplify.configure(awsconfig);
Using a theme from Amplify with ThemeProvider
.
<ThemeProvider theme={studioTheme}>
<App />
</ThemeProvider>
Import the UI component created and configured from Amplify Studio.
import {
FeatureCardCollection
} from './ui-components';
Modifying the components locally
From the above screenshots, you may have noticed the images being broken while previewing on Amplify Studio. Let's modify the InfoCardDetails
component to retrieve data from Amplify Storage.
import React, { useEffect, useState } from "react";
import {
getOverrideProps,
useNavigateAction,
} from "@aws-amplify/ui-react/internal";
import { Button, Divider, Flex, Image, Text } from "@aws-amplify/ui-react";
import { Storage } from "aws-amplify"
import { useHistory } from "react-router-dom";
export default function InfoCardDetails(props) {
const { infoCard, overrides, ...rest } = props;
//Set the states
const [imageThumbnail, setImageThumbnail] = useState('')
const [mdDoc, setMDDoc] = useState('')
useEffect(() => {
fetchImage()
fetchMD()
}, [])
//Using Amplify Storage to download images
async function fetchImage() {
try {
const image = await Storage.get(infoCard.s3_thumbnail, {
level: "public"
})
setImageThumbnail(image)
} catch (err) { console.log('error fetching images') }
}
....
//Setting image to Image component
<Image
width="unset"
height="408px"
display="block"
gap="unset"
alignItems="unset"
justifyContent="unset"
shrink="0"
alignSelf="stretch"
position="relative"
padding="0px 0px 0px 0px"
objectFit="cover"
src={imageThumbnail}
{...getOverrideProps(overrides, "image")}
></Image>
....
}
After modifying the same in FeatureCard
and ServiceCard
, locally run the app with npm start
.
The app renders all the images after they are downloaded from Amplify Storage.
Wrap-up
Building applications with Amplify Studio has certainly amplified developer experience with defining, provisioning, and also managing different AWS services.
Having to do it manually for a full-stack developer during development would mean that they would need in-depth knowledge of all those underlying AWS services.
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