Squire is an HTML5 rich text editor, which provides powerful cross-browser normalisation, whilst being supremely lightweight and flexible. It is built for the present and the future, and as such does not support truly ancient browsers. It should work fine back to around Opera 12, Firefox 3.5, Safari 5, Chrome 9 and IE9.
An example UI integration can be tried at http://neilj.github.io/Squire/.
Unlike other HTML5 rich text editors, Squire was written as a component for writing documents (emails, essays, etc.), not doing wysiwyg websites. If you are looking for support for inserting form controls or flash components or the like, you'll need to look elsewhere. However for many purposes, Squire may be just what you need, providing the power without the bloat. The key features are:
- Only 11.5KB of JS after minification and gzip (35KB before gzip).
- Does not include its own XHR wrapper, widget library or lightbox overlays.
- No dependencies.
- No UI for a toolbar is supplied, allowing you to integrate seamlessly with the rest of your application and lose the bloat of having two UI toolkits loaded. Instead, you get a component you can insert in place of a
<textarea>
and manipulate programatically.
Squire provides an engine that handles the heavy work for you, making it easy to add extra features. With the changeFormat
method you can easily add or remove any inline formatting you wish. And the modifyBlocks
method can be used to make complicated block-level changes in a relatively easy manner.
If you need more commands than in the simple API, I suggest you check out the source code (it's not very long), and see how a lot of the other API methods are implemented in terms of these two methods.
The general philosophy of Squire is to allow the browser to do as much as it can (which unfortunately is not very much), but take control anywhere it deviates from what is required, or there are significant cross-browser differences. As such, the document.execCommand
method is not used at all; instead all formatting is done via custom functions, and certain keys, such as 'enter' and 'backspace' are handled by the editor.
- Copy the contents of the
build/
directory onto your server. - Edit the
<style>
block in document.html to add the default styles you would like the editor to use (or link to an external stylesheet). - In your application, instead of a
<textarea>
, use an<iframe src="path/to/document.html">
. - In your JS, attach an event listener to the
load
event of the iframe. When this fires you can grab a reference to the editor object throughiframe.contentWindow.editor
. - Use the API below with the
editor
object to set and get data and integrate with your application or framework.
If you load the library into a top-level document (rather than an iframe), it will not turn the page into an editable document, but will instead add a function named Squire
to the global scope. Call new Squire( document )
, with the document
from an iframe to instantiate multiple rich text areas on the same page efficiently.
By default, the editor will use a <div>
for blank lines, as most users have been conditioned by Microsoft Word to expect Enter to act like pressing return on a typewriter. If you would like to use <p>
tags (or anything else) for the default block type instead, you can pass a config object as the second parameter to the squire constructor. You can also
pass a set of attributes to apply to each default block:
var editor = new Squire( document, {
blockTag: 'P',
blockAttributes: { style: 'font-size: 16px;' }
})
If using the simple setup, call editor.setConfig(…);
with your
config object instead. Be sure to do this before calling editor.setHTML()
.
If you are adding a UI to Squire, you'll probably want to show a button in different states depending on whether a particular style is active in the current selection or not. For example, a "Bold" button would be in a depressed state if the text under the cursor is already bold.
The efficient way to determine the state for most buttons is to monitor the "pathChange" event in the editor, and determine the state from the new path. If the selection goes across nodes, you will need to call the hasFormat
method for each of your buttons to determine whether the styles are active. See the getPath
and hasFormat
documentation for more information.
Squire is released under the MIT license. See LICENSE for full license.
Attach an event listener to the editor. The handler can be either a function or an object with a handleEvent
method. This function or method will be called whenever the event fires, with an event object as the sole argument. The following events may be observed:
- focus: The editor gained focus.
- blur: The editor lost focus
- keydown: Standard DOM keydown event.
- keypress: Standard DOM keypress event.
- keyup: Standard DOM keyup event.
- input: The user inserted, deleted or changed the style of some text; in other words, the result for
editor.getHTML()
will have changed. - pathChange: The path (see getPath documentation) to the cursor has changed. The new path is available as the
path
property on the event object. - select: The user selected some text.
- undoStateChange: The availability of undo and/or redo has changed. The event object has two boolean properties,
canUndo
andcanRedo
to let you know the new state. - willPaste: The user is pasting content into the document. The content that will be inserted is available as the
fragment
property on the event object. You can modify this fragment in your event handler to change what will be pasted. You can also call thepreventDefault
on the event object to cancel the paste operation.
The method takes two arguments:
- type: The event to listen for. e.g. 'focus'.
- handler: The callback function to invoke
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Remove an event listener attached via the addEventListener method.
The method takes two arguments:
- type: The event type the handler was registered for.
- handler: The handler to remove.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Adds or removes a keyboard shortcut. You can use this to override the default keyboard shortcuts (e.g. Ctrl-B for bold – see the bottom of KeyHandlers.js for the list).
This method takes two arguments:
- key: The key to handle, including any modifiers in alphabetical order. e.g.
"alt-ctrl-meta-shift-enter"
- fn: The function to be called when this key is pressed, or
null
if removing a key handler. The function will be passed three arguments when called:- self: A reference to the Squire instance.
- event: The key event object.
- range: A Range object representing the current selection.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Focuses the editor.
The method takes no arguments.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Removes focus from the editor.
The method takes no arguments.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Returns the document
object of the editable area. May be useful to do transformations outside the realm of the API.
Returns the HTML value of the editor in its current state. This value is equivalent to the contents of the <body>
tag and does not include any surrounding boilerplate.
Sets the HTML value for the editor. The value supplied should not contain <body>
tags or anything outside of that.
The method takes one argument:
- html: The html to set.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Returns the text currently selected in the editor.
Inserts an image at the current cursor location.
The method takes one argument:
- src: The source path for the image.
Returns a reference to the newly inserted image element.
Inserts an HTML fragment at the current cursor location, or replaces the selection if selected. The value supplied should not contain <body>
tags or anything outside of that.
The method takes one argument:
- html: The html to insert.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Returns the path through the DOM tree from the <body>
element to the current current cursor position. This is a string consisting of the tag, id and class names in CSS format. For example BODY>BLOCKQUOTE>DIV#id>STRONG>SPAN.font>EM
. If a selection has been made, so different parts of the selection may have different paths, the value will be (selection)
. The path is useful for efficiently determining the current formatting for bold, italic, underline etc, and thus determining button state. If a selection has been made, you can has the hasFormat
method instead to get the current state for the properties you care about.
Returns a W3C Range object representing the current selection/cursor position.
Changes the current selection/cursor position.
The method takes one argument:
- range: The W3C Range object representing the desired selection.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Undoes the most recent change.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
If the user has just undone a change, this will reapply that change.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Queries the editor for whether a particular format is applied anywhere in the current selection.
The method takes two arguments:
- tag: The tag of the format
- attributes: (optional) Any attributes the format.
Returns true
if any of the selection is contained within an element with the specified tag and attributes, otherwise returns false
.
Makes any non-bold currently selected text bold (by wrapping it in a <b>
tag).
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Makes any non-italic currently selected text italic (by wrapping it in an <i>
tag).
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Makes any non-underlined currently selected text underlined (by wrapping it in a <u>
tag).
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Removes any bold formatting from the selected text.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Removes any italic formatting from the selected text.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Removes any underline formatting from the selected text.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Makes the currently selected text a link. If no text is selected, the URL or email will be inserted as text at the current cursor point and made into a link.
This method takes two arguments:
- url: The url or email to link to.
- attributes: (optional) An object containing other attributes to set on the
<a>
node. e.g.{ target: '_blank' }
. Anyhref
attribute will be overwritten by the url given as the first argument.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Removes any link that is currently at least partially selected.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Sets the font face for the selected text.
This method takes one argument:
- font: A comma-separated list of fonts (in order of preference) to set.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Sets the font size for the selected text.
This method takes one argument:
- size: A size to set. Any CSS length value or absolute-size value is accepted, e.g. '13px', or 'small'.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Sets the colour of the selected text.
This method takes one argument:
- colour: The colour to set. Any CSS colour value is accepted, e.g. '#f00', or 'hsl(0,0,0)'.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Sets the colour of the background of the selected text.
This method takes one argument:
- colour: The colour to set. Any CSS colour value is accepted, e.g. '#f00', or 'hsl(0,0,0)'.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Sets the text alignment in all blocks at least partially contained by the selection.
This method takes one argument:
- alignment: The direction to align to. Can be 'left', 'right', 'center' or 'justify'.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Sets the text direction in all blocks at least partially contained by the selection.
This method takes one argument:
- direction: The text direction. Can be 'ltr' or 'rtl'.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Executes a function on each block in the current selection, or until the function returns a truthy value.
This method takes two arguments:
- fn The function to execute on each block node at least partially contained in the current selection. The function will be called with the block node as the only argument.
- mutates A boolean indicating whether your function may modify anything in the document in any way.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Extracts a portion of the DOM tree (up to the block boundaries of the current selection), modifies it and then reinserts it and merges the edges. See the code for examples if you're interested in using this function.
This method takes one argument:
- modify The function to apply to the extracted DOM tree; gets a document fragment as a sole argument.
this
is bound to the Squire instance. Should return the node or fragment to be reinserted in the DOM.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Increases by 1 the quote level (number of <blockquote>
tags wrapping) all blocks at least partially selected.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Decreases by 1 the quote level (number of <blockquote>
tags wrapping) all blocks at least partially selected.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Changes all at-least-partially selected blocks to be part of an unordered list.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Changes all at-least-partially selected blocks to be part of an ordered list.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Changes any at-least-partially selected blocks which are part of a list to no longer be part of a list.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Increases by 1 the nesting level of any at-least-partially selected blocks which are part of a list.
Returns self (the Squire instance).
Decreases by 1 the nesting level of any at-least-partially selected blocks which are part of a list.
Returns self (the Squire instance).