Library of primitives focused around component props.
-
combineProps
- Reactively merges multiple props objects together while smartly combining some of Solid's JSX/DOM attributes. -
filterProps
- Create a new props object with only the property names that match the predicate.
npm install @solid-primitives/props
# or
yarn add @solid-primitives/props
# or
pnpm add @solid-primitives/props
A helper that reactively merges multiple props objects together while smartly combining some of Solid's JSX/HTML attributes.
Event handlers (onClick, onclick, onMouseMove, onSomething), and refs (props.ref) are chained.
class
, className
, classList
and style
are combined.
For all other props, the last prop object overrides all previous ones. Similarly to Solid's mergeProps.
import { combineProps } from "@solid-primitives/props";
const MyButton: Component<ButtonProps> = props => {
// primitives of a lot of headless ui libraries will provide props to spread
const { buttonProps } = createButton();
// they can be combined with user's props easily
const combined = combineProps(props, buttonProps);
return <button {...combined} />;
};
// component consumer can provide button props
// they will be combined with those provided by createButton() primitive
<MyButton style={{ margin: "24px" }} />;
Every function/tuple property with on___
name get's chained. That could potentially include properties that are not actually event-listeners – such as only
or once
. Hence you should remove them from the props (with splitProps).
Chained functions will always return void
. If you want to get the returned value from a callback, you have to split those props and handle them yourself.
Warning: The types for event-listeners often won't correctly represent the values. Chaining is meant only for DOM Events spreading to an element.
const combined = combineProps(
{
onClick: e => {},
onclick: e => {},
},
{
onClick: [(n, e) => {}, 123],
},
);
// combined.onClick() will call all 3 of the functions above
The default order of execution is left-to-right. If you want to change it, you can use an options object as the last argument: (reverseEventHandlers: true
)
const combined = combineProps(
// props need to be passed in an array
[{ onClick: () => console.log("parent") }, { onClick: () => console.log("child") }],
{
reverseEventHandlers: true,
},
);
combined.onClick(); // "child" "parent"
For better reference of how exactly combineProps
works, see the TESTS
A couple of lower-lever helpers that power combineProps
:
const styles = stringStyleToObject("margin: 24px; border: 1px solid #121212");
styles; // { margin: "24px", border: "1px solid #121212" }
const styles = combineStyle("margin: 24px; border: 1px solid #121212", {
margin: "2rem",
padding: "16px",
});
styles; // { margin: "2rem", border: "1px solid #121212", padding: "16px" }
https://codesandbox.io/s/combineprops-demo-ytw247?file=/index.tsx
A helper that creates a new props object with only the property names that match the predicate.
An alternative primitive to Solid's splitProps that will split the props eagerly, without letting you change the omitted keys afterwards.
The predicate
is run for every property read lazily — any signal accessed within the predicate
will be tracked, and predicate
re-executed if changed.
Params:
-
props
— The props object to filter. -
predicate
— A function that returnstrue
if the property should be included in the filtered object.
Returns A new props object with only the properties that match the predicate.
import { filterProps } from "@solid-primitives/props";
const MyComponent = props => {
const dataProps = filterProps(props, key => key.startsWith("data-"));
return <div {...dataProps} />;
};
Creates a predicate function that can be used to filter props by the prop name dynamically.
The provided predicate
function get's wrapped with a cache layer to prevent unnecessary re-evaluation. If one property is requested multiple times, the predicate
will only be evaluated once.
The cache is only cleared when the keys of the props object change. (when spreading props from a singal) This also means that any signal accessed within the predicate
won't be tracked.
import { filterProps, createPropsPredicate } from "@solid-primitives/props";
const MyComponent = props => {
const predicate = createPropsPredicate(props, key => key.startsWith("data-"));
const dataProps = filterProps(props, predicate);
return <div {...dataProps} />;
};
See CHANGELOG.md