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nanohtml

npm version build status downloads js-standard-style

HTML template strings for the Browser with support for Server Side Rendering in Node.

Installation

$ npm install nanohtml

Usage

Browser

var html = require('nanohtml')

var el = html`
  <body>
    <h1>Hello planet</h1>
  </body>
`

document.body.appendChild(el)

Node

Node doesn't have a DOM available. So in order to render HTML we use string concatenation instead. This has the fun benefit of being quite efficient, which in turn means it's great for server rendering!

var html = require('nanohtml')

var el = html`
  <body>
    <h1>Hello planet</h1>
  </body>
`

console.log(el.toString())

Node with custom DOM

Modules like jsdom implement (parts of) the DOM in pure JavaScript. If you don't really need the performance of string concatenation, or use nanohtml components that modify the raw DOM, use nanohtml/dom to give nanohtml a custom Document.

var JSDOM = require('jsdom').JSDOM
var nanohtml = require('nanohtml/dom')
var jsdom = new JSDOM()

var html = nanohtml(jsdom.window.document)
var el = html`
  <body>
    <h1>Hello planet</h1>
  </body>
`
el.appendChild(html`<p>A paragraph</p>`)

el.outerHTML === '<body><h1>Hello planet</h1><p>A paragraph</p></body>'

Interpolating unescaped HTML

By default all content inside template strings is escaped. This is great for strings, but not ideal if you want to insert HTML that's been returned from another function (for example: a markdown renderer). Use nanohtml/raw for to interpolate HTML directly.

var raw = require('nanohtml/raw')
var html = require('nanohtml')

var string = '<h1>This a regular string.</h1>'
var el = html`
  <body>
    ${raw(string)}
  </body>
`

document.body.appendChild(el)

Attaching event listeners

var html = require('nanohtml')

var el = html`
  <body>
    <button onclick=${onclick}>
      Click Me
    </button>
  </body>
`

document.body.appendChild(el)

function onclick (e) {
  console.log(`${e.target} was clicked`)
}

Multiple root elements

If you have more than one root element they will be combined with a DocumentFragment.

var html = require('nanohtml')

var el = html`
  <li>Chashu</li>
  <li>Nori</li>
`

document.querySelector('ul').appendChild(el)

Conditional attributes

Use a javascript object to conditionally add HTML attributes.

var html = require('nanohtml')

var customAttr = isFuzzy ? { 'data-hand-feel': 'super-fuzzy' } : {}
var el = html`
  <div ${ customAttr }></div>
`

Static optimizations

Parsing HTML has significant overhead. Being able to parse HTML statically, ahead of time can speed up rendering to be about twice as fast.

Browserify

From the command line

$ browserify -t nanohtml index.js > bundle.js

Programmatically

var browserify = require('browserify')
var nanohtml = require('nanohtml')
var path = require('path')

var b = browserify(path.join(__dirname, 'index.js'))
  .transform(nanohtml)

b.bundle().pipe(process.stdout)

In package.json

{
  "name": "my-app",
  "private": true,
  "browserify": {
    "transform": [
      "nanohtml"
    ]
  },
  "dependencies": {
    "nanohtml": "^1.0.0"
  }
}

Bundling

Webpack

At the time of writing there's no Webpack loader yet. We'd love a contribution!

Babel / Parcel

Add nanohtml to your .babelrc config.

Without options:

{
  "plugins": [
    "nanohtml"
  ]
}

With options:

{
  "plugins": [
    ["nanohtml", {
      "useImport": true
    }]
  ]
}

Options

Rollup

Use the @rollup/plugin-commonjs plugin with @rollup/plugin-node-resolve. Explicitly import the browser or server entrypoint in your application. E.g.:

import html from 'nanohtml/lib/browser';

Attributions

Shout out to Shama and Shuhei for their contributions to Bel, yo-yoify and pelo. This module is based on their work, and wouldn't have been possible otherwise!

See Also

License

MIT