/awesomplete

Ultra lightweight, usable, beautiful autocomplete with zero dependencies.

Primary LanguageHTMLMIT LicenseMIT

Awesomplete

Build Status

http://leaverou.github.io/awesomplete/

Awesomplete is an ultra lightweight, customizable, simple autocomplete widget with zero dependencies, built with modern standards for modern browsers.

Basic Usage

Before you try anything, you need to include awesomplete.css and awesomplete.js in your page, via the usual tags:

<link rel="stylesheet" href="awesomplete.css" />
<script src="awesomplete.js" async></script>

Then you can add an Awesomplete widget by adding the following input tag:

<input class="awesomplete"
       data-list="Ada, Java, JavaScript, Brainfuck, LOLCODE, Node.js, Ruby on Rails" />

Add class="awesomplete" for it to be automatically processed (you can still specify many options via HTML attributes) Otherwise you can instantiate with a few lines of JS code, which allow for more customization.

There are many ways to link an input to a list of suggestions. The simple example above could have also been made with the following markup, which provides a nice native fallback in case the script doesn’t load:

<input class="awesomplete" list="mylist" />
<datalist id="mylist">
	<option>Ada</option>
	<option>Java</option>
	<option>JavaScript</option>
	<option>Brainfuck</option>
	<option>LOLCODE</option>
	<option>Node.js</option>
	<option>Ruby on Rails</option>
</datalist>

Or the following, if you don’t want to use a <datalist>, or if you don’t want to use IDs (since any selector will work in data-list):

<input class="awesomplete" data-list="#mylist" />
<ul id="mylist">
	<li>Ada</li>
	<li>Java</li>
	<li>JavaScript</li>
	<li>Brainfuck</li>
	<li>LOLCODE</li>
	<li>Node.js</li>
	<li>Ruby on Rails</li>
</ul>

There are multiple customizations and properties able to be instantiated within the JS. Libraries and definitions of the properties are available in the Links below.

##Contributing

Prerequisites

Install Node.js and npm. On OSX with Homebrew installed it is as easy as:

brew install node

Install dependencies:

npm install

Running tests

Run tests once and exit:

npm test

Continious mode. Whenever any source or test file changes, tests will run automatically:

karma start

Chrome starts automatically and stops on Ctrl+C. You can also open http://localhost:9876/ in any other browser and it will run the tests as long as the tab is open.

Adding a test

Jasmine is the testing framework used by Awesomplete.

To write a test (or suite of tests) start by adding a describe function which receives a string describing what is being tested and a function containing what you expect the test to do. Inside the function use the it block to arrange and assert a functionality.

A test would look like this:

describe("A fact", function(){
    it("is always true",function(){
        var fact = true;
        expect(fact).toBe(true);
    });
});

See existing tests in test directory as an example. More expectations and examples on how to use Jasmine can be found on the official documentation.

License

Awesomplete is released under the MIT License. See LICENSE file for details.

Links

The official site for the library is at http://leaverou.github.io/awesomplete/.

Documentation for the API and other topics is at http://leaverou.github.io/awesomplete/#api.

Created by Lea Verou and other fantastic contributors.