leanweb

Builds framework agnostic web components.

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import leanweb from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/leanweb';
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README

Leanweb Leanweb

Builds framework agnostic web components.

Installation

  • npm install leanweb -g as a global tool, or
  • npm install leanweb -D in the project as a dev dependency.

If leanweb is installed as a dev dependency, you will need to run npx lw, otherwise just run lw if it is installed as global tool.

I don't see any reason leanweb should be installed as npm install leanweb.

Background

I like the idea in Angular that 3 files (html/js/scss) as a component are in charge of a box, like a div, a rectangle area. But I don't like Angular in that my code has to be depending on so many bloated dependencies to run. I created leanweb as a set of tools to help create web components based web projects, which:

  • are based on native DOM and web components api
  • are pure Javascript, no fancy framework
  • are assistive, not restrictive
  • are more standards, less proprietary
  • are built to last

The principle is simply that 3 files (html/js/scss) as a web component will control a box.

Getting started

In this demo, I assume leanweb is installed as a global tool by running

npm i leanweb -g

leanweb init or lw init

Create a directory called demo for this demo project.

$ mkdir demo
$ cd demo
demo$ lw init
demo$

Now a src/ directory are created at the project root. src/leanweb.json looks like:

{
  "name": "demo",
  "version": "0.4.5",
  "components": ["root"],
  "imports": [],
  "resources": ["resources/"]
}

which suggests a root web component demo-root is created. In src/ directory, an index.html, an empty demo.scss and an empty global-styles.scss files are created, in global-styles.scss we can add global styles. demo-root web component directory is created at src/components/root/. There are 3 files in this directory:

  • root.html
  • root.js
  • root.scss

root.html

<div>demo-root works!</div>

root.js defines your new web component demo-root, which is a web component based on standard DOM api.

root.js

import LWElement from "./../../lib/lw-element.js";
import ast from "./ast.js";

customElements.define(
  "demo-root",
  class extends LWElement {
    // LWElement extends HTMLElement
    constructor() {
      super(ast);
    }
  }
);

root.scss is empty, which is for you to add web component specific styles.

leanweb serve or lw serve

Run lw serve and you should see a browser window open. Try make some changes in the code, and save, the browser should refresh automatically to reflect your changes. lw serve

leanweb electron or lw electron

Run lw electron or even lw elec and you should see an electron app window open as follows:

lw electron

leanweb generate or lw generate

Let's create a login web component with lw generate or lw g.

demo$ lw g login
demo$

Now the leanweb.json has one more entry in the component list:

{
  "name": "demo",
  "version": "0.4.5",
  "components": ["root", "login"],
  "imports": [],
  "resources": ["resources/"]
}

demo-login is the newly generated web component. The web component name is prefixed with project name demo-. Inside src/components/, a new web component directory login is created containing 3 files:

  • login.html
  • login.js
  • login.scss

Now let's make two changes, first open up src/components/root/root.html, and add a new line <demo-login></demo-login>. The new root.html should look like the following after the change:

<div>demo-root works!</div>
<demo-login></demo-login>

Then open up src/components/login/login.scss, and add the following style:

div {
  color: red;
}

And you should see the changes in the browser. Please note the styles added to the login component does not affect other components.

lw serve

Run lw electron again, and you will see the same changes reflected in the electron app.

lw electron

leanweb dist or lw dist

Run lw dist, and a dist directory will be created with minified files for production.

leanweb clean or lw clean

lw clean will delete build/ and dist/ directories.

leanweb upgrade or lw u

lw upgrade will upgrade src/lib/ directory if there is a new version available.

leanweb destroy or lw destroy

lw destroy project-name will remove the src/, build/ and dist/ directory. Please note the src/ directory will be deleted by this command.

leanweb help or lw help

lw help command-name will print help information for the command. For example, lw help dist or lw h di will print help information for lean dist.

leanweb version or lw version

lw version will print version information.

lw directives

lw

Contents inside a tag with lw directive are considered expressions that will be evaluated. In the example below, the <span lw>name</span> will be evaluated as <span>Leanweb</span>, because the variable name is defined in the web component js file with the value Leanweb.

Hello <span lw>name</span>!
// ...
name = "Leanweb";
// ...
Hello Leanweb!

lw-if

<span lw-if='name==="Leanweb"'>Leanweb</span>

The span DOM node will be shown if name==="Leanweb" will evaluate true, otherwise, it will not be shown.

lw-for

The following example shows how lw-for directive helps to generate DOM nodes for each item in the items array.

<div lw lw-for="item, $index in items">$index+': '+item</div>
// ...
items = ["one", "two", "three"];
// ...
0: one
1: two
2: three

lw-model and lw-on:

<input type="text" lw-model="name" />
<span lw>name</span>
<br />
<button lw-on:click="resetName()">Reset Name</button>

You could bind multiple events like lw-on:click,change=handler($event, $node).

// ...
resetName() {
  this.name = 'Leanweb';
}
// ...
lw-model

lw-class:

<div lw lw-for="item, $index in items" lw-class:active="isActive($index)">
  item
</div>
// ...
items = ['one', 'two', 'three'];
isActive(index) {
  return index === 1;
}
// ...
.active {
  color: red;
}
lw-class

lw-bind:

<img lw-bind:src="imgSrc" lw-bind:width="imageWidth" />
// ...
imgSrc = "https://leanweb.app/images/az.gif";
imageWidth = 400;
// ...
lw-bind

lw-input:

lw-input is used to pass and share data from parent to children.

demo-parent.html

<demo-child lw-input:parent="self" lw-input:userData="user"></demo-child>

demo-parent.js

// ...
// self is defined in LWElement as `self = this`;
user = { firstname: "Qian", lastname: "Chen" };
// ...

The child is able to access the parent and user object passed in with lw-input: directive from inputReady() method. demo-child.js

// ...
inputReady() {
  console.log(this.parent);
  console.log(this.userData);
}
// ...

Form Binding

Here is a few examples how Leanweb helps web components work with form binding.

Checkbox

// ...
items = ['one', 'two', 'three'];
toggleCheckboxes() {
  if (this.checkedValues.length) {
    this.checkedValues.length = 0;
  } else {
    this.checkedValues = [...this.items];
  }
}
checkedValues = [];
// ...
<button lw-on:click="toggleCheckboxes()">Toggle Checkboxes</button>
<div lw-for="item, $index in items">
  <input type="checkbox" lw-bind:value="item" lw-model="checkedValues" />
  <span lw>item</span>
</div>
<span lw>checkedValues</span>
Leanweb Form Binding Checkbox

Select

// ...
items = ['one', 'two', 'three'];
selectTwo() {
   this.selectedOption = 'two';
}
selectedOption;
// ...
<button lw-on:click="selectTwo()">Select Two</button>
<div>
  <select lw-model="selectedOption">
    <option lw lw-for="item, $index in items">item</option>
  </select>
</div>
<span lw> selectedOption </span>
Leanweb Form Binding Select

Multiple Select

// ...
items = ['one', 'two', 'three'];
toggleAllOptions() {
  if (this.selectedOptions.length) {
    this.selectedOptions.length = 0;
  } else {
    this.selectedOptions = [...this.items];
  }
}
selectedOptions = [];
// ...
<button lw-on:click="toggleAllOptions()">Toggle All</button>
<div>
  <select lw-model="selectedOptions" multiple>
    <option lw lw-for="item, $index in items">item</option>
  </select>
</div>
<span lw> selectedOptions </span>
Leanweb Form Binding Multiple Select

Radio Button

// ...
items = ['one', 'two', 'three'];
chooseTwo() {
  this.picked = 'two';
}
picked;
// ...
<button lw-on:click="chooseTwo()">Choose Two</button>
<div lw-for="item, $index in items">
  <input
    type="radio"
    name="pickOne"
    lw-bind:value="item"
    lw-model="picked"
  /><span lw>item</span>
</div>
<span lw>picked</span>
Leanweb Form Binding Radio Button

Range

// ...
selectRange50() {
  this.selectedRange = 50;
}
selectedRange = 10;
// ...
<button lw-on:click="selectRange50()">Select Range 50</button> <br />
<input type="range" lw-model="selectedRange" />
<span lw>selectedRange</span>
Leanweb Form Binding Range

Import libraries from node_modules

Assuming npm module lodash-es is installed, you could use any of the following import statements for your web component class:

import get from "/node_modules/lodash-es/get.js"; // find from node_modules

Importing a JSON file:

import someJSON from "./some.json";

Importing CSS/SCSS:

import agate from "/node_modules/highlight.js/scss/agate.scss";

// customElements.define('demo-root',
//  class extends LWElement {  // LWElement extends HTMLElement
//    constructor() {
//      super(ast);
super.applyStyles(agate);
//    }
//  }
//);

Component Communication

The following project demonstrates how Leanweb helps web components to talk to each other.

Leanweb Component Communication

pub.js

// import LWElement from './../../lib/lw-element.js';
// import ast from './ast.js';

// customElements.define('demo-pub',
//   class extends LWElement {  // LWElement extends HTMLElement
//     constructor() {
//       super(ast);

setInterval(() => {
  this.time = new Date(Date.now()).toLocaleString();
  leanweb.eventBus.dispatchEvent("time", this.time);
  this.update();
}, 1000);

//     }
//   }
// );

pub.html

<div class="pub">
  <span>Time Publisher</span>
  <span lw>time</span>
</div>

sub.js

// import LWElement from './../../lib/lw-element.js';
// import ast from './ast.js';

// customElements.define('demo-sub',
//   class extends LWElement {  // LWElement extends HTMLElement
//     constructor() {
//       super(ast);
//     }

       sub() {
         this.listener = leanweb.eventBus.addEventListener('time', event => {
           this.time = event.data;
           this.update();
         });
         this.subscribed = true;
       }

       unsub() {
         leanweb.eventBus.removeEventListener(this.listener);
         this.subscribed = false;
       }
//   }
// );

sub.html

<div class="sub">
  <span>Time Subscriber</span>
  <span lw>time</span>
  <div class="buttons">
    <button lw-bind:disabled="subscribed" lw-on:click="sub()">
      Subscribe Time
    </button>
    <button lw-bind:disabled="!subscribed" lw-on:click="unsub()">
      UnSubscribe Time
    </button>
  </div>
</div>

Source code of this demo https://github.com/elgs/leanweb-pub-sub-demo.

API

globalThis.leanweb

leanweb is the only foot print on globalThis scope.

updateComponents(...tagNames)

updateComponents is used to update all component DOMs or DOMs of specific component tag names. updateComponents takes any number of component tag names as arguments. If no argument is provided, it will update all component DOMs app wide.

eventBus

An instance of LWEventBus managed by leanweb to pass DOM update events.

urlHash

urlHash is a reference to window.location.hash which can be used for routing.

urlHashPath

urlHashPath is used to set or get the path part in the urlHash. If the urlHash is #/login?a=b&a=b&c=d, urlHashPath will be #/login.

urlHashParams

urlHashParams is used to set or get the parameters in the urlHash. If the urlHash is #/login?a=b&a=b&c=d, urlHashParams will be {a: ['b', 'b'], c: 'd'}.

LWElement

LWElement extends HTMLElement, and Leanweb components extend LWElement. So Leanweb components are just more specific versions of the standard HTMLElement. LWElement helps to wire up the lw directives in the HTML and provides some convenient methods to update the DOM.

update(rootNode = this.shadowRoot)

The update method provides a convenient way to update the DOM when the model changes. You should feel free to use old way to update DOM. The update just makes life a little easier. update takes rootNode as parameter, which allows you to specify which DOM element to start with. The default value is the currentshadowRoot.

LWElement will call update in the following scenarios:

  1. after all lw directives are initially bound to DOM;
  2. after lw-on: event is fired;
  3. after lw-model change is fired;

You may need to call the update() method manually in other events. For example:

  1. in your setTimeout/setInterval callbacks;
  2. in LWEventBus callbacks;
  3. in any network api callbacks;

domReady()

domReady() will be called after all initial DOM events are bound, and all DOM interpolations are evaluated. This method is meant to be overridden and is a great place to send events to the event bus.

inputReady()

inputReady() will be called after all input data from parent's lw-input: are ready. In this method, children are able to access the passed in data shared by parents.

turnedOn()

Called when the componnet lw-if is evaluated true.

turnedOff()

Called when the componnet lw-if is evaluated false.

urlHashChanged()

If urlHashChanged() is defined as a function, it will be called whenever the urlHash changes. This could be useful to update the DOM in component routing.

applyStyles(...styles)

applyStyles will apply the styles that is imported from a css or scss into the web component DOM.

LWEventBus

LWElement comes with a global instance of LWEventBus that helps web components to talk to each other by sending and receiving events and data. You could use your own way for component communication. LWEventBus is just a choice for you.

addEventListener(eventName, callback)

You can use leanweb.eventBus to get the global instance of event bus, and use leanweb.eventBus.addEventListener(eventName, callback) to subscribe to a type of event from the event bus. addEventListener takes two parameters. The first eventName is the name of the event, and the second callback is a function that will get called when a event is sent to the event bus. The callback function that takes a parameter event, which contains eventName and data fields. addEventListener returns the eventListener instance being added, which could be passed in removeEventListener as parameter.

removeEventListener(listener)

removeEventListener removes the listener from the event bus, so it stops being notified when a next event is fired.

dispatchEvent(eventName, data = null)

dispatchEvent is used to send an event to the event bus. It takes two parameters. eventName is the name of the event, and data is the payload data of the event.

More examples and tutorials

https://leanweb.app