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vue-mobiledoc-editor

v1.2.23

Published

a vuejs mobiledoc editor

Downloads

48

Readme

Vue Mobiledoc Editor

A Mobiledoc editor written using Vue and Mobiledoc Kit.

Installation

npm install vue-mobiledoc-editor

The vue-mobiledoc-editor will install the mobiledoc-kit package as a dependency and load its assets.

Basic Usage

This package is composed of two main components:

  • MobiledocEditor
  • MobiledocButton

Additionally, you can use the following addons:

  • MobiledocToolbar (component)
  • compToCard (factory function)

The most basic usage with an empty editor and a standard toolbar is:

// template
<Editor>
  <Toolbar />
</Editor>

// script
import Mobiledoc, { MobiledocToolbar } from "vue-mobiledoc-editor"

export default {
  components: {
    Editor: Mobiledoc.Editor,
    Toolbar: MobiledocToolbar
  }
}

You can check out the live mobiledoc-kit demo or clone the repo and run npm run dev for a more interactive example.

Read on for how to provide custom configurations to each component.

Mobiledoc Editor

The mobiledoc editor is a component that accepts these Mobiledoc-specific props:

  • mobiledoc, a Mobiledoc to be edited. (The package also exports an EMPTY_MOBILEDOC template that you can use as a default when passing a mobiledoc payload to the editor.)

  • atoms, an array of available atoms for use by the editor.

  • cards, an array of available cards for use by the editor. (Jump to the section on Card-based components for details on how to create cards as Vue components.)

  • cardOptions, an object of additional props to pass to rendered cards.

  • spellcheck, a boolean. Defaults to true.

  • autofocus, a boolean. Defaults to true.

  • placeholder, a string to use as the placeholder text when the mobiledoc is blank.

  • serializeVersion, a string representing the mobiledoc version to serialize to when firing the postWasUpdated action. Defaults to 0.3.0.

  • 'enableEditing', a boolean that represents whether the editor is rendered in display or edit mode.

Additionally, it can emit the following events:

  • willCreateEditor, a callback that fires when the Mobiledoc editor instance is about to be created. Takes no arguments.

  • didCreateEditor, a callback that fires once the Mobiledoc editor instance has been created. Will be called with the editor instance and may be used to configure it further.

  • postWasUpdated, a callback that will fire whenever the underlying document changes. It is called with the serialized mobiledoc.

(Note: For placeholder and other mobiledoc-related styles to work, you must import/copy mobiledoc-kit's default CSS file yourself.)

Example usage:

<MobiledocEditor
  :placeholder="Start Writing..."
  @postWasUpdated="savePost">
</MobiledocEditor>

The editor has the following refs and slots available:

<MobiledocEditor>
 <slot name="header" />
 <slot /> <!--default -->
 <div ref="editorPost"> <!-- The editor's post is rendered here -->
 <slot name="footer" />
</MobiledocEditor>

You can further manipulate the editor's post element (e.g. for styling) by using $refs.editorPost; or you can grab the editor instance directly using the didCreateEditor hook.

Using provide/inject, the Editor also provides the editorVm to all child components. The editorVM has the following data and methods:

  • editor, a function that returns the Mobiledoc editor instance itself

  • activeSectionTags, an object with true values for section tag names in the current selection. For example activeSectionTagNames.isH1.

  • activeMarkupTags, an object with true values for markup tag names in the current selection. For example activeMarkupTagNames.isStrong

  • canEdit, a function that returns a boolean stating whether editing is currently enabled or disabled.

  • toggleMarkup, toggles the passed markup tag name in the current selection.

  • toggleSection, toggles the passed section tag name in the current selection.

  • toggleLink, toggles the linking of a selection. The user will be prompted for a URL if required.

  • addAtom, passed an atom name, text, and payload, will add that atom at the cursor position.

  • addCard, passed a card name, payload, and editMode will add that card at the end of a post and render it in the specified mode initially.

  • toggleEditMode, updates the canEdit state and toggles the edit mode of the mobiledoc editor.

You can use the MobiledocEditor.editor instance itself to take full advantage of the features in the mobiledoc-kit API documentation.

Mobiledoc Button

The MobiledocButton is a functional component that delegates the passed props to the appropriate button. Because of this, every button requires the type prop. Any additional props depend on the type of button.

There are five types of buttons:

  • MarkupButton, requires a tag prop to identify the type of markup to toggle.

  • SectionButton, requires a tag prop to identify the type of section to toggle.

  • LinkButton, accepts an optional prompt prop that you can pass if you wish to provide a custom dialog that the user will shown when prompted input the link.

  • AtomButton, requires a name prop to identify the atom that will be added to the end of the post and accepts an optional text and payload prop.

  • CardButton, requires a name prop to identify the card that will be added to the end of the post and accepts an optional payload and mode prop. There are two mode options, edit or display; the default is display.

Additionally, all buttons accept alabel prop, to set the content of the button when used as a blockless component.

Example usage:

<MobiledocButton label="bold" type="markup" tag="strong" />

Mobiledoc Toolbar

The component creates a standard toolbar for the mobiledoc editor.

Example usage:

<MobiledocToolbar />

Advanced Usage

Component Cards

Mobiledoc supports "cards", blocks of rich content that are embedded into a post.

vue-mobiledoc-editor comes with a helper for using your own Vue components as the display and edit modes of a card.

The card's properties are passed as props to the component. You can use them like this:

// components/cards/example.vue

<template>
<div>
  <h1> {{ msg }} </h1>
</div>
</template>

<script>
export default {
  name='exCard'
  props: ['env'],
  data() {
    return {
      msg: this.env.isInEditor ? "You can edit me!" : "I'm immutable!"
    }
  }
}
</script>

Then, to use the component as a card, wrap your own component in the compToCard serializer function, before passing it to the editor as a card option:

// components/editor.js
<template>
<div>
  <Editor :cards='cards'>
    <Btn type="card" name="exCard"> exCard </Btn>
  </Editor>
</div>
</template>

<script>
import Mobiledoc, { compToCard } from "vue-mobiledoc-editor"
import example from 'components/cards/example.vue'

export default {
  data () {
    cards: [
      compToCard(example)
    ],
    components: {
      Editor: Mobiledoc.Editor,
      Btn: Mobiledoc.Button
    }
  }
}
</script>

Please note that your card must have a name to identify it. So if your component does not have a name, you'll need to provide your own to the serializer function: compToCard(NamelessComponent, 'MyCardName').

The following mobiledoc-specific properties are passed to the component:

  • env, an object of that holds environment-specific properties
  • payload, an object that holds the data payload retrieved from the mobiledoc for this card

For more details on the API for authoring cards in vanilla JavaScript, as welll as the env properties available to the card, see CARDS.md.

Creating custom mobiledoc components

To create components that control the mobiledoc editor, just inject the editorVm to child components.

For example, you can create a button that toggles whether the editor is editable or not:

export default {
  inject: ['editorVm']
  render(h) {
    const { canEdit, toggleEditMode } = this.editorVm
    return h(
      <button @click={ () => toggleEditMode() }>
        { canEdit ? 'Display' : 'Edit' }
      </button>
    )
  }
}

Note: Mobiledoc components must be nested under the Mobiledoc Editor.

Development

To get started:

  • git clone this repository

  • npm install

Run the development server:

A development server is available under the /demo directory. You can check out the demo for an example of basic usage or to interactively test your contribution.

  • npm run dev from project root

  • Visit your app at http://localhost:8080.

Run tests:

  • npm run unit

Build to dist/:

  • npm run build

Getting Help

If you'd like to report a bug or request a feature, please open an issue.