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HTMEL

npm bundle size

Simple, Efficient, Declarative HTML templates with one-way data binding.

Why should I use this over the likes of react and vue?

  • Faster
  • Simpler
  • Lighter
  • Unopinionated

Time counter example:

import htmel from "https://unpkg.com/htmel@latest/dist/htmel.min.js"

let state = {
    age: 1
};

let element = htmel(state)`
<div>
    My age is ${() => state.age} seconds
</div>
`;

document.body.appendChild(element);
setInterval(() => state.age += 1, 1000)

Try it live on JSFiddle

Installation

From CDN: Include the import statement in your script.

import htmel from "https://unpkg.com/htmel@latest/dist/htmel.min.js"

From NPM: npm install htmel, Then include in your script:

import htmel from "htmel"

Overview

htmel lets you write HTML templates in JavaScript with template literals. htmel stays as unopinionated as possible by sticking to HTML with no special syntax.

htmel provides a single export:

let text = "World!"
let element = htmel()`
<div>
    Hello ${text}
</div>
`;
document.body.appendChild(element)

element is a regular HTML element that we can insert into the DOM.

Data Binding

htmel provides a way to update an element by binding it to a state object. When a property on the state object changes, htmel automatically updates only the relevant part of the element:

let state = {
    text: "World?"
}

let element = htmel(state)`
<div>
    Hello ${() => state.text}
</div>
`;
state.text = "World!"

In the above example, when state.text changed, htmel modified the div's content.

Notice that we used an arrow function () => state.text instead of just state.text. When using state's properties, always use arrow functions, otherwise htmel won't update the template.

Speed

htmel is extremely fast. htmel saves references to DOM elements, and when state changes, it updates only the relevant elements instead of the whole root element.

Consider the following code that contains two expressions and some static content:

let element = htmel(state)`
<div class="${() => state.class}">
    ${() => state.content}
    <div>Some other irrelevant static content...</div>
</div>
`;
state.class = "classy";
state.content = "a content";

First state.class was set, and then state.content.

Instead of overwriting the whole div twice, htmel first updates the property class, then the textNode content. The other irrelevant text didn't change.

Faster than React

React revels in its speed by minimizing DOM updates. In order to minimize them, React generates a diff between virtual DOMs on each update. In the above example, React would have created the whole div in memory, compared the current and new divs, and only updated the diff in the DOM. Htmel on the other hand keeps a reference to elements in the DOM, with no need for the diff process.

Examples

Text

`<div> 
    ${() => state.text} some text between, ${() => state.moreText}
</div>`

Conditionals:

`
<div>
    ${() => state.a ? "a" : "b"}
    ${() => state.condition && "am i here?"}
</div>
`

CSS:

`<style> 
    #my-element {
        color: ${() => state.color};
    }
</style>`

Events:

`<button onclick=${() => state.a+=1}>
    ${() => state.a}
</button>`

Attributes:

`<div dir="${() => state.dir}">what is my direction?</div>`

Attribute name:

`<div ${() => state.attrName}>i have some attr</div>`

Attribute dict:

let state = {
    inputAttrs: {
        dir: "left",
        placeholder: "i am placeholder"
    }
}
htmel()`<input ${() => state.inputAttrs}></input>`

Nesting template (HTML element) inside a template:

let state = {
    someInsideData: {name: "old name"}
}

let element = htmel(state)`
<div>
    I have other elements inside of me
    ${() => htmel(state.someInsideData)`
        <div>${() => state.someInsideData.name}</div>
    `}
</div>
`;

// Modify prop of inner template
state.someInsideData.name = "new name"

// Modify whole inner template (prop of outer template)
state.someInsideData = {name: "new name"}

List of elements:

let state = {
    items: [{
        name: "Mojojojo"
    }, {
        name: "harambe"
    }]
};

let element = htmel(state)`
<div>
${() => state.items.map(item => htmel(item)`
    <div>${() => item.name}</div>
`)}
</div>
`;

// Modify prop of specific item
state.items[0].name += "s";

// Modify the whole list
state.items = [{name: "new name"}, {name: "another"}]

A single expression can contain multiple properties:

`<div>${() => state.a + state.b}</div>`

A single dom node can contain multiple expressions - here we see style attribute node:

`<div style="color:${() => state.color}; width:${() => state.width}px;">`

Multiple states in single htmel template:

htmel(state1, state2)`
<div>
    ${() => state1.text}
    ${() => state2.text}
</div>
`;
state1.text = "i am text"
state2.text = "i am some other unrelated text"

Multiple templates with one state (good for displaying global state):

htmel(state)`
<div>text is ${() => state.text}</div>
`
htmel(state)`
<div>${() => state.text} is text</div>
`
;
state.text = "life"

Custom DOM Elements example:

<body>
<script type="module">
    import htmel, {htmels} from "https://unpkg.com/htmel@latest/dist/htmel.min.js"

    // 30 lines to achieve React-like behaviour, while using web standards:
    // CustomElements, ShadowRoot, MutationObserver, Attributes.
    class HtmElement extends HTMLElement {
        constructor(state) {
            super();
            // Props and state, like in React
            this.state = state || {};
            this.props = {};

            const updateProp = attr => {
                this.props[attr] = (this[attr] === undefined ? this.getAttribute(attr) : this[attr])
            }

            // Put current attributes into props
            [...this.attributes].forEach(attr => updateProp(attr.name))

            // Observe the custom element for attribute changes using MutationObserver, and update the props
            const addProp = mutationsList => mutationsList.forEach(mutation => updateProp(mutation.attributeName));
            new MutationObserver(addProp).observe(this, {attributes: true});

            // Add shadow DOM
            this.attachShadow({mode: 'open'});

            // Create template and append to custom element
            let elements = this.render();
            elements.forEach(element => this.shadowRoot.appendChild(element));
        }

        get html() {
            return htmels(this.props, this.state)
        }
    }

    // Define custom element
    customElements.define("my-list-item", class extends HtmElement {
        render() {
            return this.html`
            <button onclick=${() => this.props.clicked()}>
                click me for the ${() => this.props.clicks}th time.
            </button>
            `
        }
    })

    // Define another custom element
    customElements.define("my-custom-element", class extends HtmElement {
        constructor() {
            // Send state to parent
            super({
                items: [
                    {clicks: 0},
                    {clicks: 0}
                ],
                margin: 20
            })
        }

        render() {
            return this.html`
                <style>
                    :host {
                        display: block;
                        margin: ${() => this.state.margin}px;
                    }
                </style>
                <div>
                    ${() => this.state.items.map(item => htmel(item)`
                        <my-list-item
                            clicks="${() => item.clicks}"
                            clicked=${() => () => item.clicks += 1}
                            data=${() => item.data}></my-list-item>
                    `)}
                </div>
                <button onclick=${() => this.state.items = [...this.state.items, {clicks: 0}]}>
                    add a button
                </button>
            `
        }
    });
</script>
<my-custom-element></my-custom-element>
</body>

Try it live on JSFiddle

Comprehensive features example:

import htmel from "https://unpkg.com/htmel@latest/dist/htmel.min.js"

window.state = {
        name: "Inigo Montoystory",
        color: "red",
        age: 3,
        clicks: 1,
        placeholder: "this is hint",
        amAlive: true
    };
    window.innerState = {
        deathColor: "blue"
    };
    window.secondState = {
        age: 10
    }

    let element = htmel(state, secondState)`
<div>
    My name is <span style="color: ${() => state.color}">
        ${() => state.name}
    </span>

    <div>i will live ${() => state.age + 1}ever</div>
    <div>second state age is  ${() => secondState.age} yars</div>
    <div>i am ${"static"}</div>

    <button onclick=${() => state.clicks += 1}>
        click me baby ${() => state.clicks} more time
    </button>

    <style>
     #thing {
        color: ${() => state.color};
     }
    </style>
    <div id="thing">colorful things</div>

    <input placeholder=${() => state.placeholder}>

    <div>
        ${() => state.amAlive ? "yes" : htmel(innerState)`
            <span style="color: ${() => innerState.deathColor}; font-size: ${() => innerState.deathColor === "blue" ? "40px" : "13px"};">NO</span>`}
    </div>
</div>
`;

    // element is a regular html element
    document.body.appendChild(element);

    // modifying the state
    state.name = "John Cena!!!";

    // switching the color
    setInterval(() => state.color = state.color === "blue" ? "red" : "blue", 500);

Try it live on JSFiddle

How does it work?

Consider the following example:

htmel(state)`
<div id="parent">
    <div id="child">${() => state.content}</div>
</div>
`;
state.content = "new content"

when the last line is called, htmel only updates #child's content, by rerunning the expression () => state.content. htmel does several things to make that possible:

  • Wrap state object with setters and getters
    • Setters notify htmel that property has changed and should be rerendered. (when state.content = "new content" is called)
    • Getters allow us to know which property corresponds to which expression in the html: when () => state.content is called, the getter for content is called, letting htmel know that content property corresponds to that expression.
  • Analyze the resulting HTML element to keep a reference to each of the nodes containing expressions. For example, htmel keeps a reference to the #child's TextNode which will be changed when content's setter is called. It does so by inserting randomly generated IDs into the expressions, the then finding them.

In order to minimize the amount of DOM operations being done, htmel batches DOM updates instead of immediately updating when setters are called.

Why bound expression must be functions?

When an expression isn't a function, htmel can't rerun it when state's properties are changed - in fact, no property is linked to a static expression. Consider this expression:

${state.a}

htmel can't possible know that the property a is linked to this expression, because only the value of a is passed.

Its possible to use eval to convert expressions into callbacks (add ()=> to the above code) but that would slow performance and be prone to errors and security problems.

Contribution

Feel free to contact me about bugs, features and anything you'd like.

If you like this project and you feel like contributing, questions about the code and PRs are very welcome :)