HyperScript
Create HyperText with JavaScript, on client or server.
See also mercury, a modular ui framework influenced by hyperscript but much more heavily optimized.
Example
var h = require('hyperscript')
h('div#page',
h('div#header',
h('h1.classy', 'h', { style: {'background-color': '#22f'} })),
h('div#menu', { style: {'background-color': '#2f2'} },
h('ul',
h('li', 'one'),
h('li', 'two'),
h('li', 'three'))),
h('h2', 'content title', { style: {'background-color': '#f22'} }),
h('p',
"so it's just like a templating engine,\n",
"but easy to use inline with javascript\n"),
h('p',
"the intention is for this to be used to create\n",
"reusable, interactive html widgets. "))
On the server
You can still use hyperscript on the server, the limitation is that events don't make sense anymore, but you can use it to generate html:
console.log(h('h1', 'hello!').outerHTML)
=> '<h1>hello!</h1>'
h (tag, attrs, [text?, Elements?,...])
Create an HTMLElement
. The first argument must be the tag name, you may use a
fully qualified tagname for building e.g. XML documents: `h('ns:tag').
classes & id
If the tag name is of form name.class1.class2#id
that is a shortcut
for setting the class and id.
default tag name
If the tag name begins with a class or id, it defaults to a <div>
.
Attributes
If an {}
object is passed in it will be used to set attributes.
var h = require('hyperscript')
h('a', {href: 'https://npm.im/hyperscript'}, 'hyperscript')
Note that hyperscript sets properties on the DOM element object, not
attributes on the HTML element. This makes for better consistency across
browsers and a nicer API for booleans. There are some gotchas, however.
Attributes such as colspan
are camel cased to colSpan
, and for
on the
label element is htmlFor
to avoid collision with the language keyword. See the
DOM HTML specification
for details.
events
If an attribute is a function, then it will be registered as an event listener.
var h = require('hyperscript')
h('a', {href: '#',
onclick: function (e) {
alert('you are 1,000,000th visitor!')
e.preventDefault()
}
}, 'click here to win a prize')
styles
If an attribute has a style property, then that will be handled specially.
var h = require('hyperscript')
h('h1.fun', {style: {'font-family': 'Comic Sans MS'}}, 'Happy Birthday!')
or as a string
var h = require('hyperscript')
h('h1.fun', {style: 'font-family: Comic Sans MS'}, 'Happy Birthday!')
You may pass in attributes in multiple positions, it's no problem!
children - string
If an argument is a string, a TextNode is created in that position.
children - HTMLElement
If a argument is a Node
(or HTMLElement
), for example, the return value of a call to h
that's cool, too.
children - null.
This is just ignored.
children - Array
Each item in the array is treated like a ordinary child. (string or HTMLElement) this is useful when you want to iterate over an object:
var h = require('hyperscript')
var obj = {
a: 'Apple',
b: 'Banana',
c: 'Cherry',
d: 'Durian',
e: 'Elder Berry'
}
h('table',
h('tr', h('th', 'letter'), h('th', 'fruit')),
Object.keys(obj).map(function (k) {
return h('tr',
h('th', k),
h('td', obj[k])
)
})
)
Cleaning Up
If you need to clean up a widget created using hyperscript - deregistering all its event handlers and observable listeners, you can use context()
.
var h = require('hyperscript').context()
var o = require('observable')
var text = o()
text('click here to win a prize')
h('a', {href: '#',
onclick: function (e) {
text('you are 1,000,000th visitor!')
e.preventDefault()
}
}, text)
// then if you want to remove this widget from the page
// to cleanup
h.cleanup()
Ecosystem
- html2hscript - Parse HTML into hyperscript
- dom2hscript - Frontend library for parsing HTML into hyperscript using the browser's built in parser.
- html2hscript.herokuapp.com - Online Tool that converts html snippets to hyperscript
- html2hyperscript - Original commandline utility to convert legacy HTML markup into hyperscript
-
hyperscript-helpers - write
div(h1('hello')
instead ofh('div', h('h1', 'hello'))
- react-hyperscript - use hyperscript with React.
License
MIT