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hijinks

v2.0.3

Published

Fun and tiny DOM builder utility inspired by HyperScript

Downloads

4

Readme

Hijinks

Hijinks is a tiny DOM builder utility inspired by HyperScript. Relentlessly simple, it weighs in at less than 0.3kb gzipped. Despite its small size, you'll find it to be quite flexible and familiar if you've ever used React or similar libraries. None of this comes at the expense of compatibility, as it still supports legacy browsers like Internet Explorer.

Installation

Install via NPM:

npm install hijinks

Usage

<div id="target"></div>
<script type="module">
	import { h } from 'https://unpkg.com/hijinks';
	const target = document.getElementById('target');
	const element = h('span', { className: 'greeting' }, 'Hello World!');
	target.appendChild(element);
</script>

You can even create elements with JSX syntax if you so desire. Assuming you're using the Babel JSX transform plugin, define Hijinks as the import source for the automatic runtime.

.babelrc:

{
	"plugins": [
		[
			"@babel/plugin-transform-react-jsx",
			{
				"runtime": "automatic",
				"importSource": "hijinks"
			}
		]
	]
}

app.jsx:

const target = document.getElementById('target');
const element = <span className="greeting">Hello World!</span>;
target.appendChild(element);

API

createElement (h)

The hijinks module exports createElement (aliased as h) as a named export:

export function createElement(
	tag: string | Component,
	attributes?: Attributes | null,
	...children: Node | string | Array<Node | string> | HTMLCollection
): Node;

tag

The tag name of the element to create, or a function ("component") which receives attributes including children and is expected to return an HTMLElement.

attributes

An optional object of attributes and HTMLElement properties to assign to the created element. Any properties not known to the HTMLElement interface are assigned as attributes.

children

The remainder of arguments can consist of one (or array of) HTMLElement or strings to be appended as children to the created DOM node. Of course, since the Hijinks itself returns an HTMLElement, it's expected that you can easily compose together trees of elements.

Fragment

Fragment is also available and behaves similarly to React fragments, returning a DocumentFragment.

import { h, Fragment } from 'hijinks';
const fragment = <>Example</>;
// Or: const fragment = h(Fragment, null, 'Example');

License

Copyright (c) 2017-2021 Andrew Duthie

Released under the MIT License.