0.2.0-beta.1 • Published 3 years ago

@gebruederheitz/wp-async-posts-loader v0.2.0-beta.1

Weekly downloads
-
License
GPL-3.0-only
Repository
github
Last release
3 years ago

Wordpress Async Posts Loader

The front-end script to work with the gebruederheitz/wp-async-post-provider PHP composer package.

Installation

> npm i @gebruederheitz/wp-async-posts-loader

Usage

Basic Usage

import {LoadMore} from '@gebruederheitz/wp-async-posts-loader';

new LoadMore();

This will attach the listener to a button matching .ghwp-load-more button and a container .ghwp-latest-posts. Clicking the button will make an asynchronous REST request to /wp-json/ghwapp/v1/posts/load-more?page=${page}, where the PHP Posts Provider resides. The rendered posts thus retrieved will be appended to the container. The number of posts can be specified through the Provider's configuration server-side.

Available options

You may customize the button & container used by providing options to the constructor:

new LoadMore({
    buttonSelector: 'a.load-more-button[href="#"]',
    containerSelector: 'section#posts',
});

API

Some methods you may find useful:

const loader = new LoadMore();
loader.removeButton();  // when you've had enough – this will be called
                        // automatically when there are no more posts left to be
                        // loaded
loader.onClick();       // Allows you to programmatically trigger loading more
                        // elements. Do not use getMorePosts() unless you know
                        // know what you're doing!
loader.on('event:name', callback) // Attach an event listener

Events

EventParametersDescription
post:append{post: Element}A post has been appended to the container.
posts:endn/aAll posts have been retrieved, the button will now be removed.
posts:parsed{posts: Element[]}The posts have been retrieved and parsed into an array of DOM elements.
load:startn/aLoading has been requested.
load:finishn/aAll processing has finished.

Additional classnames

During the loading process, the button element will receive a .busy class, which you can use to give visual feedback to the user.

Extending functionality

You can easily extend the module's functionality by building on top of the class. Here are some examples:

Additional parameters

import {LoadMore} from './load-more';

class MyLoader extends LoadMore {

    /*
     *  Use the initFilters() stub to initialize your filter properties, for
     *  example by reading them from the button's data attributes:
     *
     * <div class="ghwp-load-more">
     *     <button type="button" data-ghwp-category="42" >Load more</button>
     * </div>
     *
     */
    initFilters() {
        this.category = 0;
        this.tag = 0;

        if (this.button.dataset) {
            /* category will be 42 */
            this.category = this.button.dataset.ghwpCategory || 0;
            /* tag will not be set */
            this.tag = this.button.dataset.ghwpTag || 0;
        }
    }

    /*
     *  Override / extend the getRequestPath() method to apply the filters to
     *  the URL's query:
     */
    getRequestPath(page = 0) {
        let path = super.getRequestPath(page);

        if (this.category) {
            path += `&category=${this.category}`;
        }
        if (this.tag) {
            path += `&tag=${this.tag}`;
        }

        return path;
    }
}