nativejsx-noproto
v4.3.2
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JSX to native DOM API transpilation.
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nativejsx-noproto
JSX to native DOM API transpilation without prototypes.
This is a fork of NativeJSX for use cases where prototyping on HTMLElement
isn't possible, such as in the Salesforce Lightning Framework. This is accomplised using a window.nativejsx
object. If you cannot pollute the global namespace or are able to use prototypes on HTMLElement
, you should try the original NativeJSX first.
nativejsx
JSX to native DOM API transpilation.
Like the idea of keeping JSX around as a general-purpose templating language? nativejsx is a well-rounded JSX feature subset that makes sense within the realm of JavaScript's native DOM API.
I know. "Why all the words?" Just show you something.
Example
Here's the scenario, Capitan:
function template() {
return (
<div class="btn-group" role="group" aria-label="Basic example">
<button type="button" class="btn btn-secondary" onClick={eventListener}>Left</button>
<button type="button" class="btn btn-secondary" ref={(ref) => this.middleButton = ref}>Middle</button>
<button type="button" class="btn btn-secondary">Right</button>
<button type="button" class="btn btn-secondary" style={{backgroundColor: 'peachpuff'}}>Primary</button>
</div>
);
}
That looks awesome, right? Yeah.
Now we bake it in nativejsx
using nativejsx.parse
:
var nativejsx = require('nativejsx');
nativejsx.parse('dat-btn-group.js', {
declarationType: 'var',
variablePrefix: '$$'
}).then(function(transpiledGoodness) {
console.log(transpiledGoodness);
});
That console.log
reveals the amazing native DOM API output:
function template() {
return function () {
var $$a = document.createElement('div');
$$a.setAttribute('class', 'btn-group');
$$a.setAttribute('role', 'group');
$$a.setAttribute('aria-label', 'Basic example');
var $$b = document.createElement('button');
$$b.setAttribute('type', 'button');
$$b.setAttribute('class', 'btn btn-secondary');
$$b.addEventListener('click', eventListener);
$$a.appendChild($$b);
var $$c = document.createTextNode('Left');
$$b.appendChild($$c);
var $$d = document.createElement('button');
$$d.setAttribute('type', 'button');
$$d.setAttribute('class', 'btn btn-secondary');
$$a.appendChild($$d);
var $$e = document.createTextNode('Middle');
((ref) => this.middleButton = ref)($$e);
$$d.appendChild($$e);
var $$f = document.createElement('button');
$$f.setAttribute('type', 'button');
$$f.setAttribute('class', 'btn btn-secondary');
$$a.appendChild($$f);
var $$g = document.createTextNode('Right');
$$f.appendChild($$g);
var $$h = document.createElement('button');
$$h.setAttribute('type', 'button');
$$h.setAttribute('class', 'btn btn-secondary');
$$h.setStyles({ backgroundColor: 'peachpuff' });
$$a.appendChild($$h);
var $$i = document.createTextNode('Primary');
$$h.appendChild($$i);
return $$a;
}.call(this);
}
IMPORTANT NOTES:
Tested Node Versions
- 6.10.0
Frontend Dependencies
You have two choices:
- Use a very tiny JavaScript file located in
dist
,nativejsx-prototype.js
. Feel free to include it in your build steps (before any nativejsx-transpiled code runs, of course).
<script type="text/javascript" src="path/to/nativejsx-prototype.js"></script>
// or the minified version
<script type="text/javascript" src="path/to/nativejsx-prototype.min.js"></script>
- Enable inline usage with the API option,
prototypes: 'inline'
. Warning: this placessetAttributes
andappendChildren
in every file that they are needed.
API
// (String, Object) => Promise => String
parse(fileName, options)
// (String, Object) => String
parseSync(fileName, options)
// String => String
transpile(jsx)
Options
- declarationType:
var
(default),const
, orlet
. - variablePrefix: Any string (defaults to
$$
) you can conjure up that produces a valid JavaScript variable. - prototypes: Either
true
(default) or'inline'
. - acorn: All acorn options are available here. Defaults to
{plugins: {jsx: true}, ecmaVersion: 6, sourceType: 'module'}
.
Build Tools
- Shell Script:
nativejsx path-to-jsx/**/*.jsx [--output ./here]
. (Seenativejsx -h
for examples.) - Webpack: nativejsx-loader.
- Grunt: grunt-nativejsx.
- Gulp: gulp-nativejsx.
Development
Wish List
- ~~More Tests~~.
- ~~Hardened Nodal JSXExpressions~~.
- ~~Gulp, grunt, and webpack plugins~~.
- Source maps.
- Support SVG elements.
- (Your suggestion.)
Terminology
- AST: Abstract syntax tree.
- Compositions: These are endgame native DOM ASTs that we plan on swapping with JSX.
- Generators: Barebone AST node types (some are combinations of node types).
- Transformers: Takes compositions and generators and actually completes the swapping.
- Walkers: Sets up the state, allocates variables, and traverses JSXElements to our liking.
What the heck is appendChildren
?
appendChildren
helps clean up the mess JSXExpressions (the {} things) leave due to JavaScript's lack of static typing. I can't rightly tell if the expressions your fingers conjure up are going to return JSX, literals, or whatever else.
What the heck is setAttributes
?
setAttributes
handles the JSXSpreadAttribute expression that is in the JSX Specification. In other words, <div {...attributes}></div>
, where attributes
is an object containing valid HTML attribute names and values, should just work. There isn't a convenient way to do this with native DOM.
What the heck is setStyles
?
setStyles
takes an Object
that maps keys to HTMLElement.prototype.style
and sets the corresponding value. This is a reimplementation of React's fancy style attribute.
Why does it output everything in a closure?
I'm glad you stuck around to ask. Due to the imperative nature of the native DOM API, we're outputting variable allocations – you know, the "$$a" stuff. To avoid variable clobbering, our DOM goodies are tucked away into a JavaScript closure, safe and sound.