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neverland's Introduction

Neverland πŸŒˆπŸ¦„

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πŸ“£ Community Announcement

Please ask questions in the dedicated discussions repository, to help the community around this project grow β™₯


Update if you're looking for something even smaller than neverland, don't miss Β΅land!


Hooks via lighterhtml

import {Component, render, html, useState} from 'neverland';

const Counter = Component((initialState) => {
  const [count, setCount] = useState(initialState);
  return html`
  <button onclick=${() => setCount(count + 1)}>
    Count: ${count}
  </button>`;
});

// basic example, show two independent counters
render(document.body, html`
  <div>
    A bounce of counters.<hr>
    ${Counter(0)} ${Counter(1)}
  </div>
`);

Concept

As React Hooks were born to simplify some framework pattern, Neverland goal is to simplify lighterhtml usage, in a virtual component way, through the mighty dom-augmentor.

See what I did there? React components' hooks are based on virtual DOM while neverland's hooks are based on virtual components.

This library simulates Custom Elements, without needing polyfills, simply by passing zero, one, or more arguments to every desired components in each template literal hole.

// if you don't need hooks, you don't need to wrap components
const LinkLi = ({text, href}, highlighted) => html`
  <li class=${highlighted}>
    see <a href="${href}">${text}</a>
  </li>
`;

// some container with some click logic that uses hooks: $(wrap it)
const Links = $((items) => {
  const [clicked, changeState] = useState(-1);
  const onclick = useCallback(event => {
    const li = event.target.closest('li');
    changeState(
      // changeState accordingly to the clicked index
      [].indexOf.call(event.currentTarget.children, li)
    );
  }, []);
  return html`
  <ul onclick=${onclick}>
    ${items.map(
      (item, i) => LinkLi(item, i === clicked ? 'highlight' : '')
    )}
  </ul>`;
});

// render components within an element
render(document.body, html`
  List of links:
  ${Links([
    {text: 'blog', href: 'www.blog.me'},
    {text: 'bio', href: 'www.bio.me'},
  ])}
`);

Available Renders

Both html and svg renders are exposed via the neverland module, and you must use the render utility

Available Hooks

All hooks are provided by augmentor, via dom-augmentor that takes care or injecting life-cycle DOM events when useEffect is used.

About useImperativeHandle

This hook is strictly React oriented with no meaning in current dom-augmentor world.

When should I wrap components, as in const Comp = $(() => html...)?

Every time you wrap a component you grant yourself the used hooks within would run specifically for that component.

However, if you create an extra hook, or your callback doesn't return either html or svg result, you don't need to wrap it.

A simple rule of thumbs to know when a component should be wrapped or not is the following one:

  • does this function/callback/arrow returns html or svg templates tag literals?
  • if previous point is true, am I using any sort of direct, or composed, hook within such function, so that I want its state/results to be confined in the returned element, instead of side-effecting outer wrappers?

If the answer to both points is yes, then you should wrap the callback, otherwise, you most likely shouldn't.

This little thinking is currently needed due the fact there's no parsing or pre-processing in neverland, so that such wrapping cannot be done automatically for you, when needed.

You can still decide to wrap any callback that returns html or svg templates tag literals results, but that might have performance implication in larger projects.

How To ...

Common ways via bundlers or CDNs:

  • globally, as const {neverland: $, render, html, useState} = window.neverland through script with source https://unpkg.com/neverland
  • CJS via const {neverland: $, render, html, useState} = require('neverland')
  • ESM with bundlers via import {neverland as $, render, html, useState} from 'neverland'
  • pure ESM via import {neverland as $, render, html, useState} from 'https://unpkg.com/neverland?module'

If you use a bundler you can simply install neverland via npm or yarn.

It is also possible to use it in browsers via https://unpkg.com/neverland:

// you can import it in any scope
const {neverland, html, useState} = window.neverland;
const VirtualComp = neverland(...);

// or ...
const {neverland:$, html} = neverland;
const VirtualComp = $(...);

V3 Features / Breaking Changes

  • no more unnecessary DOM trashes πŸŽ‰
  • it is possible to have keyed results, when necessary, via html.for(ref[, id]) or svg.for(ref[, id])
  • the usage of render is mandatory, no more DOM nodes out of the box

V2 Breaking Changes

  • there is no default exported, but neverland named export
  • there are still more DOM trashes than desired, but it works, and the DX is awesome, as well as performance anyway 😊

neverland's People

Contributors

albertosantini avatar bigopon avatar dakom avatar fuzetsu avatar greenkeeper[bot] avatar nabijaczleweli avatar numfin avatar thihup avatar webreflection avatar

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