@camwiegert/typical
v0.1.1
Published
Animated typing in ~400 bytes
Downloads
5,670
Readme
typical
Animated typing in ~400 bytes :blowfish: of JavaScript.
- Zero dependencies
- MIT licensed →
- Emoji support
- Smart delete: only delete what needs deleting
- Pausing: pause between steps
- Looping: easily loop from any point
- Waiting: wait on arbitrary Promises
- Humanity: slightly varied typing speed
Install
npm install @camwiegert/typical
API
type(target: HTMLElement, ...steps: any[]) => Promise<void>;
The module exports a single function, type
, which takes a target element as its first argument, and any number of additional arguments as the steps to perform. Additional arguments perform actions based on their type:
string
arguments will be typednumber
arguments will pause, in millisecondsfunction
arguments will be called with the target element as an argumentPromise
arguments will wait for resolution
Usage
The most basic usage of type
is providing a target element and a string to type.
import { type } from '@camwiegert/typical';
type(element, 'text');
Pausing
In order to pause typing at any point, pass a number of milliseconds to pause.
type(element, 'Hello', 1000, 'Hello world!');
Looping
In order to loop, pass type
as a parameter to itself at the point at which you'd like to start looping. It can be helpful to alias type
as loop
to be explicit.
import {
type,
type as loop
};
const steps = [1000, 'Ready', 1000, 'Set', 1000, 'Go'];
type(element, ...steps, loop);
To loop a finite amount, pass your steps multiple times.
type(element, ...steps, ...steps, ...steps);
Waiting
When passed a Promise
, type
will wait for it to resolve before continuing. Because type
itself returns a Promise
, that means you can wait on a set of steps to complete before starting another.
const init = type(target, 'In a moment...', 500);
type(target, init, 'start', 500, 'looping', loop);
Functions
Function arguments are passed the target element, and can be useful for operating on the target element between steps. If you return a Promise
, type
will wait for it to resolve.
const toggle = (element) =>
element.classList.toggle('is-typing');
type(target, toggle, 'Type me', toggle);
Support
- [x] Chrome
- [x] Edge
- [x] Firefox
- [x] Safari
- [ ] Internet Explorer