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htmx-go is a type-safe library for working with HTMX in Go.

Less time fiddling with HTTP headers, more time developing awesome Hypermedia-driven applications.

Check if requests are from HTMX, and use a type-safe, declarative syntax for HTMX response headers to control HTMX behavior from the server.

Write triggers for client-side events effectively without dealing with JSON serialization. With this approach, event-driven applications are easier to develop.

Use Swap Strategy methods to fine-tune hx-swap behavior.

Uses standard net/http types. Has basic integration with templ components.

import (
	"net/http"

	"github.com/angelofallars/htmx-go"
)

func handler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
	if htmx.IsHTMX(r) {
		htmx.NewResponse().
			Reswap(htmx.SwapBeforeEnd).
			Retarget("#contacts").
			AddTrigger(htmx.Trigger("enable-submit")).
			AddTrigger(htmx.TriggerDetail("display-message", "Hello world!")).
			Write(w)
	}
}

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Installation

Use go get.

go get github.com/angelofallars/htmx-go

Then import htmx-go:

import "github.com/angelofallars/htmx-go"

HTMX Requests

Check request origin

You can determine if a request is from HTMX. With this, you can add custom handling for non-HTMX requests.

You can also use this for checking if this is a GET request for the initial page load on your website, as initial page load requests don't use HTMX.

func handler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
	if htmx.IsHTMX(r) {
		// logic for handling HTMX requests
	} else {
		// logic for handling non-HTMX requests (e.g. render a full page for first-time visitors)
	}
}

Check if request is Boosted (hx-boost)

func handler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
	if htmx.IsBoosted(r) {
		// logic for handling boosted requests
	} else {
		// logic for handling non-boosted requests
	}
}

HTMX responses

htmx-go takes inspiration from Lip Gloss for a declarative way of specifying HTMX response headers.

Basic usage

Make a response writer with htmx.NewResponse(), and add a header to it to make the page refresh:

func handler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
	writer := htmx.NewResponse().Refresh(true)
	writer.Write(w)
}

Retarget response to a different element

func handler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
	htmx.NewResponse().
		// Override 'hx-target' to specify which target to load into
		Retarget("#errors").
		// Also override the 'hx-swap' value of the request
		Reswap(htmx.SwapBeforeEnd).
		Write(w)
}

Triggers

HTMX Reference: hx-trigger

You can add triggers to trigger client-side events. htmx-go takes care of formatting and JSON serialization of the header values.

Define event triggers:

Set trigger headers using the preceding triggers:

htmx.NewResponse().
	AddTrigger(htmx.Trigger("myEvent"))
// HX-Trigger: myEvent

htmx.NewResponse().
	AddTrigger(htmx.TriggerDetail("showMessage", "Here Is A Message"))
// HX-Trigger: {"showMessage":"Here Is A Message"}

htmx.NewResponse().
	AddTrigger(
		htmx.TriggerDetail("hello", "world"),
		htmx.TriggerObject("myEvent", map[string]string{
			"level":   "info",
			"message": "Here Is A Message",
		}),
	)
// HX-Trigger: {"hello":"world","myEvent":{"level":"info","message":"Here is a Message"}}

[!TIP] Alpine.js and Hyperscript can listen to and receive details from events triggered by htmx-go. This makes triggers initiated by the server very handy for event-driven applications!

For Alpine.js, you can register an x-on:<EventName>.window listener. The .window modifier is important because HTMX dispatches events from the root window object. To receive values sent by htmx.TriggerDetail and htmx.TriggerObject, you can use $event.detail.value.

Swap strategy

HTMX Reference: hx-swap

Response.Reswap() takes in SwapStrategy values from this library.

htmx.NewResponse().
	Reswap(htmx.SwapInnerHTML)
// HX-Reswap: innerHTML

htmx.NewResponse().
	Reswap(htmx.SwapAfterEnd.Transition(true))
// HX-Reswap: innerHTML transition:true

Exported SwapStrategy constant values can be appended with modifiers through their methods. If successive methods write to the same modifier, the modifier is always replaced with the latest one.

import "time"

htmx.SwapInnerHTMl.After(time.Second * 1)
// HX-Reswap: innerHTML swap:1s

htmx.SwapBeforeEnd.Scroll(htmx.Bottom)
// HX-Reswap: beforeend scroll:bottom

htmx.SwapAfterEnd.IgnoreTitle(true)
// HX-Reswap: afterend ignoreTitle:true

htmx.SwapAfterEnd.FocusScroll(true)
// HX-Reswap: afterend ignoreTitle:true

htmx.SwapInnerHTML.ShowOn("#another-div", htmx.Top)
// HX-Reswap: innerHTML show:#another-div:top

// Modifier chaining
htmx.SwapInnerHTML.ShowOn("#another-div", htmx.Top).After(time.Millisecond * 500)
// HX-Reswap: innerHTML show:#another-div:top swap:500ms

htmx.SwapBeforeBegin.ShowWindow(htmx.Top)
// HX-Reswap: beforebegin show:window:top

htmx.SwapDefault.ShowNone()
// HX-Reswap: show:none

Code organization

HTMX response writers can be declared outside of functions with var so you can reuse them in several places.

[!CAUTION] If you're adding additional headers to a global response writer, always use the .Clone() method to avoid accidentally modifying the global response writer.

var deleter = htmx.NewResponse().
    Reswap(htmx.SwapDelete)

func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
	deleter.Clone().
		Reselect("#messages").
		Write(w)
}

Templ integration

HTMX pairs well with Templ, and this library is no exception. You can render both the necessary HTMX response headers and Templ components in one step with the .RenderTempl() method.

// hello.templ
templ Hello() {
    <div>Hello { name }!</div>
}

// main.go
func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
	htmx.NewResponse().
		Retarget("#hello").
		RenderTempl(r.Context(), w, Hello())
}

[!NOTE] To avoid issues with custom HTTP status code headers with this approach, it's recommended to use Response().StatusCode() so the status code header is always set after the HTMX headers.

Stop polling

If you have an element that is polling a URL and you want it to stop, use the htmx.StatusStopPolling 286 status code in a response to cancel the polling. HTMX documentation reference

w.WriteHeader(htmx.StatusStopPolling)

Header names

If you need to work with HTMX headers directly, htmx-go provides constant values for all HTTP header field names of HTMX so you don't have to write them yourself. This mitigates the risk of writing header names with typos.

// Request headers
const (
	HeaderBoosted               = "HX-Boosted"
	HeaderCurrentURL            = "HX-Current-URL"
	HeaderHistoryRestoreRequest = "HX-History-Restore-Request"
	HeaderPrompt                = "HX-Prompt"
	HeaderRequest               = "HX-Request"
	HeaderTarget                = "HX-Target"
	HeaderTriggerName           = "Hx-Trigger-Name"
)

// Common headers
const (
	HeaderTrigger = "HX-Trigger"
)

// Response headers
const (
	HeaderLocation           = "HX-Location"
	HeaderPushURL            = "HX-Push-Url"
	HeaderRedirect           = "HX-Redirect"
	HeaderRefresh            = "HX-Refresh"
	HeaderReplaceUrl         = "HX-Replace-Url"
	HeaderReswap             = "HX-Reswap"
	HeaderRetarget           = "HX-Retarget"
	HeaderReselect           = "HX-Reselect"
	HeaderTriggerAfterSettle = "HX-Trigger-After-Settle"
	HeaderTriggerAfterSwap   = "HX-Trigger-After-Swap"
)

Compatibility

This library is compatible with the standard net/http library, as well as other routers like Chi and Gorilla Mux that use the standard http.HandlerFunc handler type.

With the Echo web framework, try passing in context.Request() and context.Response().Writer for requests and responses, respectively.

With the Gin web framework on the other hand, try using context.Request and context.Writer.

If you use Fiber, it is recommended to use htmx-fiber instead, which is a fork of htmx-go.

Additional resources

Contributing

Pull requests are welcome!

License

MIT