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jsx-domater

v1.0.1

Published

Create DOM nodes using JSX, with jsdom support

Downloads

4

Readme

JSX-Domater -- JSX to DOM

This is a simple library that in combination with other code transformation tools such as babel or typescript allows you to use JSX to create DOM nodes.

If you are simply targeting a browser there are a number of other libraries that are probably just as good or better. The vast majority of them however expect to find a document object in the global scope, which is a problem if you're doing, say, server-side rendering with jsdom.

And that's where this library comes in.

Setup

The library exports two functions that can act as the JSX createElement function:

  • createDOMElement which creates a straight up DOM node using global document
  • createDomaterElement which creates an object, on which you can call .toDOM(document) with any document object you want. This is also exported as plain createElement, which can be useful at times.

The recommended way to do things is to set up is to import one of the two functions and set up your build to use it instead of React.createElement. With typescript that'll happen by setting the value for the jsxFactory config variable to createDomaterElement

Features

Classes

You can use attribute className as an alternative to class.

The value for classes can be a string, or it can be an array. Falsy values within the array are ignored, allowing for easy conditional classes.

<div class="myclass" />
<div class={["myclass"]} />
<div class={["myclass", "myclass2"]} />
<div class={[condition && "myclass"]} />

Styles

The style attribute can be a string, or it can be an object. The keys for the object can follow either css conventions with dashes, or camel case.

<div style="display: none" />
<div style={{display: 'none'}} />
<div style={{'border-color': 'red'}} />
<div style={{borderColor: 'red'}} />

Event handlers

Attributes that begin with on and contain a function as a value are added as event handlers using addEventListener. The character following on is lowercased, allowing for onClick to match click event; this is not done for any other uppercase characters.

<button onclick={() => document.location.reload()} />
<button onClick={() => document.location.reload()} />

Custom attribute transformations

Groundwork exists for setting up other custom attribute transformations as well, but at this time this functionality is not documented.

Functions as elements

You can have function acting as custom elements to allow for simple encapsulated behaviors.

function MyParagraph(attributes, children) {
    return <p class={[attributes.spoiler && 'spoiler']} >{children}</p>    
}

<MyParagraph spoiler={false}>Hello</MyParagraph>