Easily restore your project to a previous version with our new Instant One-click Backup Recovery
Hygraph
Docs

Banner slider

#Overview

This guide shows how to build a banner slider component using nested components for banner blocks and a number field as a timer.

Banner component with fieldsBanner component with fields

Here is an example that shows how this banner could potentially look on your frontend:

Example bannerExample banner

#Prerequisites

  • REQUIRED: You need to have a Hygraph account. If you don't have one, you can sign up here.
  • REQUIRED: You need to have a Hygraph project.
    • OPTION 1: Create a project. This is the way to go if you want to follow the entire tutorial for learning purposes.
    • OPTION 2: Clone the basic models project. If you're already familiar with model creation and only want to follow the parts of the tutorial related to the banners, you can start here.
    • OPTION 3: Clone the entire cookbook. This is the way to go if you're curious about how the banners are made but don't want to follow the step-by-step creation process. This project contains the entire Banners Cookbook so you can compare them, or look into what instances they contain.
    • OPTION 4: Use an existing project of yours. If you have a project already and want to add this banner to it, this is the way to go. In this case, you may need to adjust parts of the tutorial to your own project schema.

#Core concepts

In this guide, you'll work with components, basic component fields, nested components and references. Let's look into these concepts:

  • Component: a pre-defined set of fields that can be reused across models and content entries. You can think of a component as a flexible, reusable template: you define the fields that will be used inside a component once, and then fill them with different content every time you use it in a content entry.

  • Basic component field: a component is a special field type in your Hygraph schema that defines which components of which type can be used in a model. Component fields can be of basic or modular types. A basic component field can only have one component attached to it. You can limit the number of component instances to one, or allow multiple component instances to be added in the content entry.

  • Nested components: Nested components allow you to create component fields within a component, as if you had a parent component containing one or more child components.

  • References: References are relations between two or more content entries in your project. With references, you can reuse content entries by connecting them. Once the relation is configured, you can also use it to create related content from the content creation screen.

#What you can do

This guide offers two paths:

  • Path 1: Use this guide to create a banner slider component that you can reuse across different models in your Hygraph projects.
  • Path 2: Clone one of the projects we created for you. You can clone a project that only contains the basic models so you can work on the banners right away, or you can clone the project that contains the entire Banners cookbook to compare the different banner configurations without having to clone multiple projects.

#Clone project

#Clone the basic models

We have prepared a project that contains only the basic models - Author, Shop, and Book - in case you don't want to build them from scratch:

Clone this project

If you decide to clone this project, you can skip model creation and start from this step.

#Clone the complete cookbook

We have prepared a project that contains the entire Banners cookbook:

Clone this project

This cookbook contains all the recipes we have so far to create banners, so you can compare the different banner configurations without having to clone multiple projects.

To find this particular recipe in the cookbook project, navigate to the schema and look for "Banner slide".

This project also contains a demo model that includes all the banner components as basic components, as well as a modular component that you can use as a banner type selector.

#Step-by-step guide

Before we can build a component - in this case, our banner slider - we sometimes need to create other schema elements that will later be added to those components as instances.

In this guide, we will also be building nested components. When building nested components, you need to start building from the deepest level of nesting upwards, so you can have one component ready to nest it into the next one.

We will divide this process in steps to make it more manageable:

  1. Create the models: We will create 3 sample models - Author, Book, and Shop - to use in our references.
  2. Create a link component: We will build a link component that we can add to other components as a button or link element.
  3. Create the banner block component: We'll create a banner block component that will allow us to add several banners to each slider.
  4. Create the banner slider component: Finally, we'll combine the schema elements we created before to set up our banner slider component.

#Create the models

Since our banner slider component will ultimately allow linking to external URLs as well as internal content, we need to create a set of models that we can reference later on.

For this example, we'll go with the idea of an online bookshop that has real world subsidiaries, so we'll create 3 models:

  • Author
  • Book
  • Shop

#Author model

Author modelAuthor model

Let's start with the Author model. In the Schema builder, we'll click +Add next to Models, and use the following information:

FieldInput
Display NameAuthor
API IDAuthor
API ID PluralAuthors

We'll click Add model to save.

Our model has been created but it's empty. To create a simple model that will contain basic author information, we'll add the author name, bio, and image.

Let's start with the author name, as a Single line text field. We'll find it on the Add fields right sidebar, and click Add on the field card to add it.

We'll use the following information:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameAuthor name
SettingsAPI IDauthorName
SettingsUse as title field checkboxLeave this checkbox selected

We'll click Add to save.

Next, we'll add a Rich text field, which will our author's bio. We'll select the Rich text field from the right sidebar and use the following information to create it:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameAuthor bio
SettingsAPI IDauthorBio

We'll click Add to save.

Finally, we'll add an Asset picker field, which will be our author's image. We'll select the Asset picker field from the right sidebar and use the following information to create it:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameAuthor image
SettingsAPI IDauthorImage

We'll click Add to save.

Now that we're done with our Author model, let's move on to the Book model.

#Book model

Book modelBook model

Our second model will be the Book model. In the Schema builder, we'll click +Add next to Models, and use the following information:

FieldInput
Display NameBook
API IDBook
API ID PluralBooks

We'll click Add model to save.

Our model has been created but it's empty. To create a simple model that will contain basic book information, we'll add the book name, description, cover image, and a relation to the author.

Let's start with the book name, as a Single line text field. We'll find it on the Add fields right sidebar, and click Add on the field card to add it.

We'll use the following information:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameBook name
SettingsAPI IDbookName
SettingsUse as title field checkboxLeave this checkbox selected

We'll click Add to save.

Next, we'll add a Rich text field, which will our book description. We'll select the Rich text field from the right sidebar and use the following information to create it:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameBook description
SettingsAPI IDbookDescription

We'll click Add to save.

Now let's add an Asset picker field, which will be our book cover image. We'll select the Asset picker field from the right sidebar and use the following information to create it:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameBook cover
SettingsAPI IDbookCover

We'll click Add to save.

Finally, we want books and authors to be connected. A great way to do this is using a two-way reference in our Book model, that will create a relation with the Author model. This type of relation will also create a reverse field that we will later be able to see in our Author model, connecting back to our Book model.

We'll find the Reference field on the Add fields right sidebar, and click Add on the field card to add it.

We'll use the following information:

TabFieldInput
DefineReference typeSelect Allow only one model to be referenced
DefineModels to referenceUse the dropdown menu to select Author
DefineReference directionSelect Two-way reference
DefineAllow multiple... checkboxSelect Allow multiple Book per Author and Allow multiple Author per Book
Configure referenceDisplay NameAuthor
Configure referenceAPI IDAuthor
Configure reverse fieldDisplay NameBook
Configure reverse fieldAPI IDbook

We'll click Add to save.

Now that we're done with our Book model, let's move on to the Shop model.

#Shop model

Shop modelShop model

Our final model is the Shop model. In the Schema builder, we'll click +Add next to Models, and use the following information:

FieldInput
Display NameShop
API IDShop
API ID PluralShops

We'll click Add model to save.

Our model has been created but it's empty. To create a simple model that will contain basic shop information, we'll add the shop name, address, picture and location.

Let's start with the shop name, as a Single line text field. We'll find it on the Add fields right sidebar, and click Add on the field card to add it.

We'll use the following information:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameShop name
SettingsAPI IDshopName
SettingsUse as title field checkboxLeave this checkbox selected

We'll click Add to save.

Next, we'll add another Single line text field for the shop address.

We'll use the following information:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameShop address
SettingsAPI IDshopAddress

We'll click Add to save.

Finally, we'll add an Asset picker field, which will be our shop's image. We'll select the Asset picker field from the right sidebar and use the following information to create it:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameShop picture
SettingsAPI IDshopPicture

We'll click Add to save.

Finally, we'll add a location field so Editors can show the shop location on a map. We'll select the Location field from the right sidebar and use the following information to create it:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameLocation
SettingsAPI IDlocation

We'll click Add to save.

Now that we're done with our three models, let's create the link component.

We are going to start by creating our first component. Our banners will need to have a link, and in this case we'll create a simple component for that.

We'll click +Add next to Components and we'll use the following information to create one:

FieldInput
Display NameLink
API IDLink
API ID PluralLinks

Click Add component to save.

We can now start adding instances to this component.

Let's start with a Single line text field, which will be the label of our link. We'll find it on the Add fields right sidebar, and click Add on the field card to add it.

We'll use the following information:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameLink label
SettingsAPI IDlinkLabel
SettingsUse as title field checkboxLeave this checkbox selected
ValidationsMake field required checkboxSelect this checkbox

We'll click Add to save.

We want our users to be able to add internal and external links, so we'll add a Reference field to relate internal content, and a Slug for external URLs.

We'll start with the external links. Let's add a Slug field, which will be our link URL. We'll find it on the Add fields right sidebar, and click Add on the field card to add it.

We'll use the following information:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameExternal link
SettingsAPI IDexternalLink
SettingsLowercase checkboxLeave this checkbox selected
ValidationsSet field as unique checkboxLeave this checkbox selected
ValidationsMatch a specific pattern checkboxLeave this checkbox selected, and use the dropdown to select the URL pattern. Write "Input value does not match the expected format." in the Custom error message field.

We'll click Add to save.

The way we configured the field validations to match a URL pattern will ensure that users will complete this field with a valid URL pattern, preventing errors. If their input does not match the expected pattern, the custom error message will inform them.

Next, we're going to ensure Editors can create internal links to content entries from the models that we created at the start of this tutorial. To achieve this, we'll add a Reference field. We'll find it on the Add fields right sidebar and use the following information:

TabFieldInput
DefineReference typeSelect Allow multiple models to be referenced (Union Type)
DefineModels to referenceUse the dropdown menu to select Author, Book, and Shop
DefineReference directionSelect One-way reference
Configure referenceDisplay NameInternal link
Configure referenceAPI IDinternalLink

We'll click Add to save.

Finally, we'll add a Boolean field that users can toggle to indicate if the link should open on a new tab. We'll find the Boolean field on the Add fields right sidebar and use the following information:

FieldInput
Display NameNew tab
API IDnewTab

We'll click Add to save.

This is how you build a link component in Hygraph. You can add this component to different models in your schema. We will add this to our banner slider later on.

Link componentLink component

We can now move on to the next step, which is building our banner block component.

#Create the banner block component

A banner slider contains several banners that pass by on a timer. We will create a banner block component that we can later add to our banner slider as a basic component field that allows multiple values. This way, users can add several banners to the slider.

Our banner block component will contain a title, a description, an image and the link component we created earlier.

To start building our banner block component, we'll click +Add next to Components and use the following information to create one:

FieldInput
Display NameBanner block
API IDBannerBlock
API ID PluralBannerBlocks

Click Add component to save.

We can now start adding instances to this component.

Let's start with a Single line text field, which will be our banner block title. We'll find it on the Add fields right sidebar, and click Add on the field card to add it.

We'll use the following information:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameBanner title
SettingsAPI IDbannerTitle
SettingsUse as title field checkboxLeave this checkbox selected

We'll click Add to save.

Next, we'll add a Rich text field, which will our banner block description. We'll select the Rich text field from the right sidebar and use the following information to create it:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameBanner description
SettingsAPI IDbannerDescription

We'll click Add to save.

Next, we'll add an Asset picker field, which will be our banner block image. We'll select the Asset picker field from the right sidebar and use the following information to create it:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameBanner image
SettingsAPI IDbannerImage

We'll click Add to save.

Earlier, we created a link component. We will now add it as a Basic component field so users will be able to add multiple links to their banners.

We'll find the Basic component field on the Add fields right sidebar, click Add to add it, and use the following information:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameBanner link
SettingsAPI IDbannerLink
SettingsSelect allowed componentsUse the dropdown to select the "Link" component

We'll click Add to save.

We can now move on to the final step, which is building our banner slider component.

#Create the banner slider component

To start building our banner slider component, we'll click +Add next to Components and use the following information to create one:

FieldInput
Display NameBanner slider
API IDBannerSlider
API ID PluralBannerSliders

Click Add component to save.

We can now start adding instances to this component.

We want our slider to have a timer, and we want that timer to provide only certain values to our editors. To achieve this, we will add a Number field and configure some validations as well as some advanced settings.

We'll add the Number field from the Add fields right sidebar using the following information:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameSlider timer
SettingsAPI IDsliderTimer
ValidationsLimit input range checkboxSelect this checkbox. We'll use the dropdown to select Between, and we'll set the first value to 5 and the second to 10. Under Custom error message we will write "Pick a number between 5 and 10"
AdvancedSet initial value checkboxSelect this checkbox. We'll type in 5 as our initial value

We'll click Add to save.

Using this configuration, our number field will only allow values between 5 and 10, ensuring editors can only pick a value within that range for the timer. If editors use an incorrect value, the error message will give them instructions to fix it.

Finally, We've set the initial value to 5, which means the field will show a 5 as its default slider timer value, but will allow editors to change it, providing they use a value between 5 and 10.

Finally, we'll add a basic component field for our banner blocks using the following information:

TabFieldInput
SettingsDisplay NameBanner blocks
SettingsAPI IDbannerBlocks
SettingsAllow multiple values checkboxSelect this checkbox
SettingsSelect allowed componentsUse the dropdown to select the "Banner block" component

We'll click Add to save.

This is how you create a banner block components with a timer and different levels of nesting.