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xcomponent-demo

v1.0.3

Published

Javascript module template.

Downloads

11

Readme

xcomponent demo

A forkable demo repo for xcomponent to help you get started.

xcomponent is a cross-domain component library which helps you render iframes and popups, pass down props, accept callbacks, and much more. This repo sets you up with the best possible starting point for building an xcomponent, including:

  • Predefined webpack, babel, karma etc. configs for working with xcomponent
  • Predefined test-setup, including a mock component frame
  • Predefined demo pages for both iframe and popup components

Useful starting points

Quick Start

Getting Started

  • Fork the module
  • Install: npm install
  • Start editing code in ./src and writing tests in ./tests
  • Build: npm run build

Building

npm run build

Running Demo Server

npm run demo

Deploying

  • Host your bundled xcomponent script somewhere, e.g. https://mysite.com/login.xcomponent.js
  • Set up a public url for your component, e.g. https://mysite.com/login
  • Make sure the login.xcomponent.js is included in the login page, and using window.xprops

Now other sites can include https://mysite.com/login.xcomponent.js on their pages, and render your component!

Tests

  • Edit tests in ./test/tests

  • Run the tests:

    npm run test

Testing with different/multiple browsers

npm run karma -- --browser=PhantomJS
npm run karma -- --browser=Chrome
npm run karma -- --browser=Safari
npm run karma -- --browser=Firefox
npm run karma -- --browser=PhantomJS,Chrome,Safari,Firefox

Keeping the browser open after tests

npm run karma -- --keep-open

Publishing

Before you publish for the first time:
  • Remove the example code in ./src, ./test/tests and ./demo
  • Edit the module name in package.json
  • Edit README.md and CONTRIBUTING.md
Then:
  • Publish your code: npm run release to build and publish a patch version
  • Or npm run release:patch, npm run release:minor, npm run release:major

Notes

  • webpack.config.js is set up to build both iframe and popup versions of your component. Normally this will be overkill and you'll just want to pick one. The reason there's an example of both is, the popup rendering code adds more to the bundle size, so cutting this out can streamline your bundle if you only need iframe support.

  • The karma tests use a mock for the component window (i.e. everything displayed in the popup window or iframe window). This can be seen here. When writing tests which need to consume window.xprops and call callbacks like window.xprops.onLogin(), you'll need to do that here.

  • This module imports from xcomponent/src rather than xcomponent/dist, allowing your build to take advantage of tree-shaking, flow-types, etc. from xcomponent and all of its dependencies. That means that various babel plugins etc. that are required by xcomponent and its dependencies are included in this module. If this isn't to your liking, you're free to switch to xcomponent/dist, but be warned that you will lose out on some benefits this way. It will reduce the build time though.

  • This module is forked from grumbler, which gives a solid (but opinionated) default setup for front-end javascript libraries, including webpack, karma, babel, flowtype, etc. You're free to switch out any of these technologies, but the existing setup is likely to give the best compatibility especially given the previous note around importing from xcomponent/src.