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el()
note: this is new. You might try to do things that intuitively should work and they won't. You might have to add support for some attribute in
UIElement.el
itself. Just remember; you don't have to. It's still the DOM API, so you can call a method on the element or pass it to$(...)
to get some real work done.
el()
is the element creator. It is a utility function built on the idea that the primary reason developers don't use the DOM API is simply because it's too verbose to be convenient. el()
is to document.createElement()
as jquery is to your for loops and recursive functions.
Furthermore, it is perhaps possible that sometimes developers flock to complex frameworks such as React; Angular; and many more, even for relatively simple applications, simply because using the DOM API directly "just feels wrong".
Let's start with a simple example of creating a div with a class and some text. Using the DOM API directly, it would look like this:
const my_div = document.createElement('div');
my_div.classList.add('my-class');
my_div.innerText = 'some text';
Using el()
, we can do the same as above like this:
const my_div = el('div.my-class', {
text: 'hello world'
});
That's a lot nicer, isn't it?
When calling el
, you provide a descriptor containing your tag name, classes, id; you do this using the same format as a selector. Using the selector format for this wasn't my idea - I stole it from Pug/Jade. In this example we also pass an object with a text
attribute. text
assigns .innerText
on the element, making it XSS-proof.
"but wait!", I hear you say, "HTML strings are still cleaner!". Tools like JSX have made it possible to use HTML syntax within javascript code and avoid caveats such as XSS vulnerabilities. That's great, but you're then forced to either bring in the tooling of a larger framework or build your own framework around JSX. It may seem worth it though; in HTML, you would write the examples above like this:
<div class="my-class">some text</div>
Putting the previous example with el()
on a single line, we see that it's a little longer.
el('div.myclass', { text: 'hello wolrd' });
However, for div
, the most common element, you don't actually need to specify the tag name.
el('.myclass', { text: 'hello world' });
Also, the second string is considered the inner-text.
el('.myclass', 'hello world');
Maybe this specific example gives el()
an advantage, but there's a good reason that it would: a div
with some text in it is likely the second-most common element on your page; second only to divs containing other divs.
The el
function accepts an array argument. Array arguments are expected to be arrays of DOM elements (that's what el()
itself returns). This means you can call el
multiple times inside an array to construct arbitrary trees.
el([ el(), el() ])
// <div><div></div><div></div></div>
Okay, my comment with the hard-to-read div nesting is a little unfair; you'd probably write the HTML with proper indentation and such:
<div>
<div></div>
<div></div>
</div>
el([
el(),
el()
])
If you pass a DOM element as the first argument, it will be treated as the parent element. This is, parent_el.appendChild(new_el)
will be called before you get your new_el
.
el(some_parent_el, 'h1', 'Hello!');
You are reading documentation for the open-source repository of Puter.
Getting started on localhost is as simple as git clone
npm install
npm start
.