- Declarative DOM programming library based on TypeScript decorators
- π Small. 1.79 kb. No dependencies.
- βοΈ No special syntax. Capsid uses standard HTML and TypeScript, and it doesn't use any non-standard syntax like JSX, Vue template, etc.
- π‘ Simple. No virtual DOMs. Capsid encourages the traditional event driven programming in a new style.
π¦ Mirroring Example
This example illustrates the basic ideas of capsid
.
import { component, on, wired } from "capsid";
// Declares `mirroring` component.
// HTML elements which have `mirroring` class will be mounted by this component.
@component("mirroring")
class Mirroring {
// Wires `dest` property to dom which is selected by `.dest` selector.
@wired(".dest")
dest!: HTMLParagraphElement;
// Wires `src` property to dom which is selected by `.src` selector.
@wired(".src")
src!: HTMLInputElement;
// Declares `input` event listener
@on("input")
onReceiveData() {
this.dest.textContent = this.src.value;
}
}
<div class="mirroring">
<input class="src" />
<p class="dest"></p>
</div>
@component("mirroring")
registers the class as the component mirroring
.
@wired
binds a dom element to the field which is queried by the given
selector. @on("input")
declares the following method is the input
event
handler. In the event handler src
value is copied to dest
content, which
results the mirroring of the input values to the textContent of .dest
paragraph.
npm install --save capsid
then:
import { component } from "capsid";
Note: You need TypeScript for using capsid because it depends on TypeScript decorators. You can easily start using TypeScript by using bundlers like parcel
If you prefer Deno, you can import capsid via
deno.land/x
registry.
import { component } from "https://deno.land/x/[email protected]/mod.ts";
import { component, emits, innerHTML, is, on, pub, sub, wired } from "capsid";
@component(name)
- class decorator
- registers as a capsid components.
@on(event, { at })
- method decorator
- registers as an event listener on the component.
@on.click
is a shorthand for@on('click')
.@on.click.at(selector)
is a shorthand for@on('click', { at: selector })
.
@emits(event)
- method decorator
- makes the decorated method an event emitter.
@wired(selector)
- field decorator
- wires the elements to the decorated field by the given selector.
- optionally
@wired.all(selector)
@is(name)
- class decorator
- Adds the class name to the given element.
@innerHTML(html: string)
- class decorator
- Sets the given html string as innerHTML of the element at the mount timing.
@pub(event: string, selector?: string)
- methods decorator
- Publishes the event to the elements which have
sub:event
class.
@sub(event: string)
- class decorator
- Adds the
sub:event
class to the given element.
capsid.component(className) is class decorator. With this decorator, you can regiter the js class as class component.
This is a shorthand of capsid.def('component', Component)
.
import { component } from 'capsid'
@component('timer')
class Timer {
...definitions...
}
The above registers Timer
class as timer
component.
@on
is a method decorator. With this decorator, you can register the method as
the event handler of the element.
import { on, component } from 'capsid'
@component('foo-btn')
class FooButton {
@on('click')
onClick (e) {
...definitions...
}
}
The above binds onClick
method to its element's 'click' event automatically.
The above is equivalent of:
class FooButton {
__mount__ () {
this.el.addEventListener('click', e => {
this.onClick(e)
})
}
onClick (e) {
...definitions...
}
}
capsid.def('foo-btn', FooButton)
@on(name, { at: selector })
is a method decorator. It's similar to @on
, but
it only handles the event from selector
in the component.
import { on, component } from 'capsid'
@component('btn')
class Btn {
@on('click', { at: '.btn' })
onBtnClick (e) {
...definitions...
}
}
In the above example, onBtnClick
method listens to the click event of the
.btn
element in the Btn
's element.
@on.click
is a shorthand for @on('click')
.
class Foo {
@on.click
onClick {
// handling of the click of the Foo component
}
}
@on.click.at(selector)
is a shorthand for @on('click', { at: selector })
class Foo {
@on.click.at(".edit-button")
onClickAtEditButton() {
// handling of the click of the edit button
}
}
NOTE: You can add this type of short hand by calling
on.useHandler(eventName)
.
on.useHandler("change");
class Foo {
@on.change.at(".title-input") // <= This is enabled by the above useHandler call.
onChangeAtTitleInput() {
// handles the change event of title input field.
}
}
@emits(eventName)
triggers the event at the end of the method.
import { emits, component } from 'capsid'
@component('manager')
class Manager {
@emits('manager.ended')
start() {
...definitions...
}
}
In the above example, start
method triggers the manager.ended
event when it
finished. The returns value of the method is passed as detail
of the event
object. So you can pass the data from children to parents.
If the method returns a promise, then the event is triggered after the promise is resolved.
const { emits, component } = require('capsid')
@component('manager')
class Manager {
@emits('manager.ended')
start () {
...definitions...
return promise
}
}
In the above example, manager.ended
event is triggered after promise
is
resolved. The resolved value of the promise is passed as detail
of the event
object.
- @param {string} selector The selector to look up the element in the component
This wires the decorated field to the element selected by the given selector. The wired element is a unusal dom element (HTMLElement), not a capsid component instance.
If the selector matches to the multiple elements, then the first one is used.
- @param {string} selector The selector to look up the elements in the component
This wires the decorated field to the all elements selected by the given
selector. This is similar to @wired
decorator, but it wires all the elements,
not the first one.
Adds the given class names to the element when it's mounted.
@component("foo")
@is("bar-observer")
class Foo {
}
make("foo", document.body);
document.body.classList.contains("bar-observer");
// => true
This decorator is useful when a component has several different roles. You can
adds the role of the component by specifying @is('class-name')
.
Sets the given html string as the innerHTML of the element at mount timing.
@component("foo")
@innerHTML(`
<p>hello</p>
`)
class Foo {
}
make("foo", document.body);
document.body.innerHTML;
// => <p>hello</p>
The method dispatches the event
to the elements which have sub:{event}
class. For example, if the method has @pub('foo')
, then it dispatches foo
event to the elements which have sub:foo
class. The dispatched events don't
buble up the dom tree.
@component("my-comp")
class MyComp {
@pub("foo")
method() {
// something ...
}
}
The returned value or resolved value of the decorator becomes the detail
prop
of the dispatched custom event.
The method dispatches event
to the given selector
.
@component("my-comp")
class MyComp {
@pub("foo", "#foo-receiver")
method() {
// something ...
}
}
This class decorator adds the sub:event
class to the given component. For
example if you use @sub('foo')
, the component have sub:foo
class, which
means this class becomes the subscriber of foo
event in combination with
@pub('foo')
decorator.
@component("my-comp")
@sub("foo")
class MyComp {
@on("foo")
handler() {
// ... do something
}
}
These are advanced APIs of capsid. You usually don't need these APIs for building an app, but these could be useful if you write capsid plugins or reusable capsid modules. These APIs are used for building decorators of capsid.
import { def, get, install, make, mount, prep, unmount } from "capsid";
def(name, constructor)
- Registers class-component.
prep([name], [element])
- Initialize class-component on the given range.
make(name, element)
- Initializes the element with the component of the given name and return the coelement instance.
mount(Constructor, element)
- Initializes the element with the component of the given class and return the coelement.
unmount(name, element)
- unmount the component from the element by its name.
get(name, element)
- Gets the coelement instance from the given element.
install(capsidModule, options)
- installs the capsid module with the given options.
- @param {string} name The class name of the component
- @param {Function} constructor The constructor of the coelement of the component
This registers constructor
as the constructor of the coelement of the class
component of the given name name
. The constructor is called with a jQuery
object of the dom as the first parameter and the instance of the coelement is
attached to the dom. The instance of coelement can be obtained by calling
elem.cc.get(name)
.
Example:
class TodoItem {
// ...behaviours...
}
capsid.def("todo-item", TodoItem);
<li class="todo-item"></li>
- @param {string} [name] The capsid component name to intialize
- @param {HTMLElement} [element] The range to initialize
This initializes the capsid components of the given name under the given element. If the element is omitted, it initializes in the entire page. If the name is omitted, then it initializes all the registered class components in the given range.
- @param {string} name The capsid component name to initialize
- @param {HTMLElement} element The element to initialize
- @return {} created coelement
Initializes the element as the capsid component and returns the coelement instance.
const timer = make("timer", dom);
- @param {Function} Constructor The constructor which defines the capsid component
- @param {HTMLElemen} element The element to mount the component
- @return {} The created coelement
Initializes the element with the component of the given class and return the coelement.
class Component {
__mount__ () {
this.el.foo = 1
}
}
const div = document.createElement('div')
capsid.mount(Component, div)
div.foo === 1 # => true
Usually you don't need to use this API. If you're writing library using capsid, you might sometimes need to create an unnamed component and need this API then.
- @param {string} name The component name
- @param {HTMLElement} element The element
Unmounts the component of the given name from the element.
Example:
@component("foo")
class Foo {
@on("input")
remove() {
unmount("foo", this.el);
}
}
The above example unmounts itself when it receives input
event.
- @param {string} name The capsid component name to get
- @param {HTMLElement} element The element
- @return The coelement instance
Gets the component instance from the element.
const timer = capsid.get("timer", el);
The above gets timer coelement from el
, which is instance of Timer
class.
- @param {CapsidModule} capsidModule The module to install
- @param {Object} options The options to pass to the module
This installs the capsid module.
capsid.install(require("capsid-popper"), { name: "my-app-popper" });
See capsid-module repository for details.
debug plugin
outputs information useful for debugging capsid app.
Via npm:
import { install } from "capsid";
import debug from "capsid/debug";
install(debug);
Via CDN:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/capsid"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/capsid/dist/capsid-debug.js"></script>
<script>capsid.install(capsidDebugPlugin)</script>
And you'll get additional debug information in console.
Via npm:
import { install } from "capsid";
import outside from "capsid/outside";
install(outside);
Via cdn:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/capsid"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/capsid/dist/capsid-outside-events.js"></script>
<script>
capsid.install(capsidOutsideEventsPlugin)
</script>
With outside-events-plugin
, you can bind methods to events outside of your
coponent's element. (This event need to bubble up to document
)
@component("modal")
class Modal {
@on.outside("click")
close() {
this.el.classList.remove("is-shown");
}
open() {
this.el.classList.add("is-shown");
}
}
The above modal
component gets is-shown
class removed from the element when
the outside of modal is clicked.
There are 2 ways to initialize components:
- When document is ready (automatic).
- When
capsid.prep()
is called (manual).
All components are initialized automatically when document is ready. You don't need to care about those elements which exist before document is ready. See Hello Example or Clock Example for example.
If you add elements after document is ready (for example, after ajax requests),
call capsid.prep()
and that initializes all the components.
const addPartOfPage = async () => {
const { html } = await axios.get('path/to/something.html')
containerElemenent.innerHTML = html
capsid.prep() // <= this initializes all the elements which are not yet initialized.
})
Capsid has 2 lifecycle events: mount
and unmount
.
nothing -> [mount] -> component mounted -> [unmount] -> nothing
-
mount
- HTML elements are mounted by the components.
- An element is coupled with the corresponding coelement and they start working together.
-
unmount
- An element is decouple with the coelement.
- All events are removed and coelement is discarded.
- You need to call
unmount(class, element)
to trigger the unmount event.
At mount
event, these things happen.
- The component class's
instance
(coelement) is created. instance
.el is set to corresponding dom element.before mount
-hooks are invoked.- This includes the initialization of event handlers, class names, innerHTML, and custom plugin's hooks.
- if
instance
has mount method, theninstance.__mount__()
is called.
The above happens in this order. Therefore you can access this.el
and you can
invoke the events at this.el
in __mount__
method.
The constructor is called at the start of mount
ing. You cannot access
this.el
here. If you need to interact with this.el
, use __mount__
method.
__mount__()
is called at the end of the mount event. When it is called,
the dom element and event handlers are ready and available through this.el
.
__unmount__()
is called when component is unmounted. If your component put
resources on global space, you should discard them here to avoid memory leak.
Coelement is the instance of Component class, which is attached to html element.
You can get coelement from the element using get
API.
- 2022-01-03 v1.8.1 Modify npm package contents. #212
- 2022-01-03 v1.8.0 Migrated to Deno. #212
- 2020-04-02 v1.7.0 Better make/get/unmount types.
- 2020-03-30 v1.6.2 Fix submodule export for TypeScript.
- 2020-03-28 v1.6.1 Fix debug plugin.
- 2020-03-28 v1.6.0 Automatic intialization of components inside
@innerHTML
. - 2020-03-21 v1.5.0 Extend
@pub
decorator and remove@notifies
. - 2020-03-21 v1.4.0 Add
@innerHTML
decorator. - 2020-03-15 v1.3.0 Add
@pub
and@sub
decorators. - 2020-03-14 v1.2.0 Add
@is
decorator. - 2020-03-13 v1.1.0 Add type declaration.
- 2020-03-12 v1.0.0 Support TypeScript decorators. Drop babel decorators support.
- 2019-06-09 v0.29.2 Throw error when empty selector is given (
@notifies
) - 2018-12-01 v0.29.0 Switch to TypeScript.
- 2018-11-22 v0.28.0 Switch to new decorator. Remove jquery-plugin.
- 2018-08-07 v0.26.1 Fix bug of unmount and on handler.
- 2018-07-12 v0.26.0 Add debug log contents.
- 2018-06-22 v0.25.0 Add
@on.useHandler
. - 2018-06-22 v0.24.0 Add
@on.click.at
. - 2018-05-20 v0.23.5 Fix unmount bug.
- 2018-04-18 v0.23.4 Fix unmount bug.
- 2018-04-10 v0.23.0 Change debug format.
- 2018-04-09 v0.22.0 Rename init to mount.
- 2018-04-08 v0.21.0 Add
unmount
. - 2018-04-04 v0.20.3 Change initialized class name.
- 2018-03-08 v0.20.0 Add install function.
- 2017-12-31 v0.19.0 Add wired, wired.all and wired.component decorators.
- 2017-12-05 v0.18.3 Add an error message.
- 2017-10-12 v0.18.0 Add Outside Events plugin.
- 2017-10-01 v0.17.0 Add Debug plugin.
- 2017-09-09 v0.16.0 Rename
@emit
to@emits
and@pub
to@notifies
- 2017-09-06 v0.15.1 Change component init sequence.
- 2017-09-05 v0.15.0 Add
mount
API. Removeinit
API. - 2017-08-04 v0.14.0 Make
@on
listeners ready at init call. - 2017-08-03 v0.13.0 Add pub decorator.
- 2017-07-15 v0.12.0 Add wire.$el and wire.elAll to jquery plugin.
- 2017-07-13 v0.11.0 Add wire.el and wire.elAll.
- 2017-07-11 v0.10.0 Add emit.first rename emit.last to emit.
- 2017-07-10 v0.9.0 Add on.click shorthand.
- 2017-03-01 v0.8.0 Modify init sequence.
- 2017-02-26 v0.7.0 Add static capsid object to each coelement class.
- 2017-02-26 v0.6.0 static init rule.
- 2017-02-25 v0.5.0 coelem.capsid, initComponent APIs.
- 2017-01-19 v0.3.0 API reorganization.
- 2017-01-19 v0.2.2 Rename to capsid.
- 2017-01-17 v0.1.1 Add plugin system.
- 2017-01-02 v13.0.0 Add init instead of init.
- 2017-01-01 v12.1.1 Fix bug of event bubbling.
- 2017-01-01 v12.1.0 Remove @emit.first. Use native dispatchEvent.
- 2016-12-31 v12.0.0 Remove cc_init feature. Add init feature.
- 2016-09-30 v10.7.1 Refactor @emit.last decorator
- 2016-09-11 v10.7.0 Add @on(event, {at}) @emit.first and @emit.last
- 2016-08-22 v10.6.2 Refactor the entrypoint.
- 2016-08-22 v10.6.1 Improved the event listener registration process.
- 2016-08-20 v10.6.0 Cleaned up some private APIs.
- 2016-08-20 v10.5.0 Cleaned up codebase and made the bundle smaller. Remove some private APIs.
- 2016-08-17 v10.4.1 Made built version smaller.
- 2016-08-16 v10.4.0 Switched to babel-preset-es2015-loose.
- 2016-08-16 v10.3.0 Modified bare @wire decorator.
- 2016-08-02 v10.2.0 Added bare @component decorator.
- 2016-07-21 v10.1.0 Added @wire decorator.
- 2016-06-19 v10.0.0 Removed deprecated decorators
@event
and@trigger
, use@on
and@emit
instead. - 2016-06-09 v9.2.0 Fixed bug of
@emit().last
decorator.
-
π Hello Example
-
β±οΈ Clock Example
-
ποΈ Counter Example
-
π¦ Mirroring Example
-
- TodoMVC in capsid.
MIT