@mojule/vdom v1.0.0
vdom
A virtual dom built on mojule tree and dom-plugins
Lets you use the mojule tree API, plugins etc. to work with HTML nodes on the server and in the browser
Important: this documentation describes a previous version and is out of date - additionally, we are currently using JSDOM in derived packages rather than VDOM for performance reasons - however the tests are up to date and show correct usage
Install
npm install @mojule/vdom
Examples
Server
const vdom = require( '@mojule/vdom' )
const {
document, documentType, text, comment, documentFragment, element,
html, head, body, meta, title, div, p, strong, input
} = vdom.h
const dom =
document(
documentType('html'),
html(
head(
meta({charset:'utf-8'}),
title('Hello World!')
),
body(
comment('Whose line is it anyway?'),
div({id:'main'},
p('The quick brown fox jumps over the ',strong('lazy dog')),
input({type:'text',name:'firstName',placeholder:'Alex'})
),
comment('Fragment not (usually) necessary but make sure it works'),
documentFragment(
comment('Text not necessary but etc.'),
p(text('lol '),'wut')
),
comment('But what if it is not in the spec?'),
element('customtag',{class:'kk'},
p('OK that works for me')
)
)
)
)
const lol = dom.querySelector( 'p:not( #main > p )' )
lol.append( text( ' ok' ) )
console.log( dom.stringify() )Note, the following has been prettified, stringify does not output any
whitespace:
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8" />
<title>Hello World!</title>
</head>
<body>
<!--Whose line is it anyway?-->
<div id="main">
<p>The quick brown fox jumps over the <strong>lazy dog</strong></p>
<input type="text" name="firstName" placeholder="Alex" />
</div>
<!--Fragment not (usually) necessary but make sure it works-->
<!--Text not necessary but etc.-->
<p>lol wut ok</p>
<!--But what if it is not in the spec?-->
<customtag class="kk">
<p>OK that works for me</p>
</customtag>
</body>
</html>Browser
Via browserify or similar:
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8" />
<title>Vdom morphdom</title>
</head>
<body>
<div id="main"></div>
<script src="main.js"></script>
</body>
</html>const vdom = require( '@mojule/vdom' )
const {
div, p, strong, input, comment, documentFragment
} = vdom.h
const vmain = div(
{ id: 'main', class: 'container' },
documentFragment(
comment( 'Hello' )
),
p( 'The quick brown fox jumps over the ', strong( 'lazy dog' ) ),
input( { type:'text', name:'firstName', placeholder:'Alex' } )
)
const main = document.querySelector( '#main' )
vmain.morphdom( main )
console.log( main.outerHTML )API reference
First, see the references for tree-factory, tree and dom-plugins, as vdom is built on those so has all of their API methods.
Additionally, vdom adds or overrides the following plugins:
accepts
Overrides base accepts so that HTML nodes can only accept nodes according to
the HTML spec, for example disallows adding a div to a span and so forth.
Stricter than the real browser DOM, which will let you do things like that and
then try to apply error correction. We may allow turning this off with a
loose: true option in future.
const span = vdom.createElement( 'span' )
const div = vdom.createElement( 'div' )
console.log( span.accepts( div ) ) // false
span.append( div ) // throwsactualize
Takes a vdom node and turns it into a browser DOM node (or compatible, like JSDOM) - just calls node.vnode() under the hood
const span = vdom.createElement( 'span' )
const spanEl = span.actualize( document )
// 'SPAN'
console.log( spanEl.tagName )categories
Returns an array of content categories (as defined by the HTML spec) for a node
const div = vdom.createElement( 'div' )
console.log( div.categories() )[ "flow content", "palpable content" ]createState
Extends the default createState to also allow the creation of nodes from
HTML strings
const div = vdom( '<div></div>' )h
Adds a hyper-script-like interface to vdom, stored on vdom.h
A convenience API for easily creating nested nodes
See the examples above.
isEmpty
Overrides default isEmpty implementation to use the definitions from the HTML
spec - note that isEmpty === true means that a node cannot have children,
not that a node does not have children.
const div = vdom.createElement( 'div' )
const img = vdom.createElement( 'img' )
console.log( div.isEmpty() ) // false
console.log( img.isEmpty() ) // trueisModules
isMetadata
Returns true if the node is a metadata element, as defined by the spec
const div = vdom.createElement( 'div' )
const meta = vdom.createElement( 'meta' )
console.log( div.isMetadata() ) // false
console.log( meta.isMetadata() ) // trueisInline
Returns true if the node's categories include 'phrasing content'
const div = vdom.createElement( 'div' )
const span = vdom.createElement( 'span' )
const text = vdom.createText( 'hello' )
console.log( div.isInline() ) // false
console.log( span.isInline() ) // true
console.log( text.isInline() ) // trueisEmbedded
Returns true if the node's categories include 'embedded content'
const div = vdom.createElement( 'div' )
const img = vdom.createElement( 'img' )
console.log( div.isEmbedded() ) // false
console.log( img.isEmbedded() ) // trueisBlock
Returns true if the node's categories contain 'flow content' and do not include 'phrasing content'
const div = vdom.createElement( 'div' )
const span = vdom.createElement( 'span' )
console.log( div.isBlock() ) // true
console.log( span.isBlock() ) // falseisContainer
Returns true if the node is not an empty node
const div = vdom.createElement( 'div' )
const img = vdom.createElement( 'img' )
console.log( div.isContainer() ) // true
console.log( img.isContainer() ) // falsemorphdom
Allows you to patch a vdom node into the real DOM, via morphdom
See the browser example above.
virtualize
Takes a real DOM (or compatible, JSDOM etc) node and turns it into a vdom node
const divEl = document.querySelector( 'div' )
const div = vdom.virtualize( divEl )
// do vdom stuff with divvnode
Returns a virtual node representation of the current node, suitable for use with morphdom but potentially also with other tools that require a more DOM-like interface
const div = vdom.createElement( 'div' )
const vdiv = div.vnode()
console.log( vdiv.tagName ) // 'div'