A Fast & Light Virtual DOM Alternative - release post, now available for both client and server.
The easiest way to describe hyperHTML
is through an example.
// this is React's first tick example
// https://facebook.github.io/react/docs/state-and-lifecycle.html
function tick() {
const element = (
<div>
<h1>Hello, world!</h1>
<h2>It is {new Date().toLocaleTimeString()}.</h2>
</div>
);
ReactDOM.render(
element,
document.getElementById('root')
);
}
setInterval(tick, 1000);
// this is hyperHTML
function tick(render) {
render`
<div>
<h1>Hello, world!</h1>
<h2>It is ${new Date().toLocaleTimeString()}.</h2>
</div>
`;
}
setInterval(tick, 1000,
hyperHTML.bind(document.getElementById('root'))
);
- Zero dependencies and it fits in less than 1.5KB (minzipped)
- Uses directly native DOM instead of inventing new syntax/APIs, DOM diffing, or virtual DOM
- Designed for template literals, a templating feature built in to JS
- Compatible with vanilla DOM elements and vanilla JS data structures
*
- Also compatible with Babel transpiled output, hence suitable for every browser you can think of
*
actually, this is just a 100% vanilla JS utility, that's why is most likely the fastest and also the smallest. I also feel like I'm writing Assembly these days ... anyway ...
You have a hyperHTML
function that is suitable for parsing template literals but it needs a DOM node context to operate.
If you want to render many times the same template for a specific node, bind it once and boost up performance for free. No new nodes, or innerHTML, will be ever used in such case: safe listeners, faster DOM.
The helper hyperHTML.wire(obj?)
is the solution to a common use case:
using hyperHTML
to define not the content of a node, but the node itself, or a list of nodes.
In this case binding a DocumentFragment
would work but it will also lose its content as soon as it's appended.
Using hyperHTML.wire()
will grant that render will always work as expected, without ever losing knowledge of its initial content.
It wires render updates to whatever content is holding.
// hyperHTML.wire() returns a new wire
const render = hyperHTML.wire();
// which can be used multiple times
const update = () => render`
<div>Hello Wired!</div>
`;
update() === update(); // true
update(); // <div>Hello Wired!</div>
// it is possible to reference a wire
const point = {x: 1, y: 2};
// simply passing a generic object
hyperHTML.wire(point)`
<span style="${`
position: absolute;
left: ${point.x}px;
top: ${point.y}px;
`}">O</span>
`;
// the used render will be always the same
hyperHTML.wire(point) === hyperHTML.wire(point);
// true
It is also possible to define a generic template, and in such case the update won't be the single node, but an Array of nodes.
-
will input lose focus? Nope, as you can test, only what needs to be updated will be updated.
-
are events stringified? Nope, even if visually set as
<a onclick="${help.click}">
events are treated differently form other attributes. Thathelp.click
will be indeed directly assigned asa.onclick = help.click
so don't worry 😉 -
how can I differentiate between textContent only and HTML or DOM nodes? If there's any space or char around the value, that'd be a textContent. Otherwise it can be strings, used as html, or DOM nodes. As summary:
render`<p>This is: ${'text'}</p>`;
for text, andrender`<p>${'html' || node || array}</p>`;
for other cases. An array will result into html, if its content has strings, or a document fragment, if it contains nodes. I've thought a pinch of extra handy magic would've been nice there 😉. -
can I use different renders for a single node? Sure thing. However, the best performance gain is reached with nodes that always use the same template string. If you have a very unpredictable conditional template, you might want to create two different nodes and apply
hyperHTML
with the same template for both of them, swapping them when necessary. In every other case, the new template will create new content and map it once per change. -
is this project just the same as yo-yo or bel ? First of all, I didn't even know those projects were existing when I've written
hyperHTML
, and while the goal is quite similar, the implementation is very different. For instance,hyperHTML
performance seems to be superior than yo-yo-perf. You can directly test hyperHTML DBMonster benchmark and see it goes N times faster thanyo-yo
version on both Desktop and Mobile browsers 🎉.
For all other deeper dirty details, please check the DeepDive page.
ES6 Template literals come with a special feature that is not commonly used: prefixed transformers.
Using such feature to map a template string to a generic DOM node, makes it possible to automatically target and update only the differences between two template invokes and with no innerHTML
involved.
Following an example:
function update(render, state) {
render`
<article data-magic="${state.magic}">
<h3>${state.title}</h3>
List of ${state.paragraphs.length} paragraphs:
<ul>${
state.paragraphs
.map(p => `<li>${p.title}</li>`)
}</ul>
</article>
`;
}
update(
hyperHTML.bind(articleElement),
{
title: 'True story',
magic: true,
paragraphs: [
{title: 'touching'},
{title: 'incredible'},
{title: 'doge'}
]
}
);
Since most of the time templates are 70% static text and 30% or less dynamic, hyperHTML
passes through the resulting string only once, finds all attributes and content that is dynamic, and maps it 1:1 to the node to make updates as cheap as possible for both node attributes and node content.
Following a list of hyperHTML
caveats (so far just one).
To achieve best performance at setup time, a special <!-- comment -->
is used the first time as template values.
This makes it possible to quickly walk through the DOM tree and setup behaviors, but it's also the value looked for within attributes.
Unfortunately, if you have html such <div attr=<!-- comment --> class="any"></div>
the result is broken, while using single or double quotes will grant a successful operation. This is the biggest, and so far only, real caveat.
In summary, always write <p attr="${'OK'}"></p>
instead of <p attr=${'OK'}></p>
, or the layout will break, even if the attribute is a number or a boolean.
In this way you'll also ensure whatever value you'll pass later on won't ever break the layout. It's a bit annoying, yet a win.
If your string literals are transpiled, this project should be compatible with every single browser, old or new.
If you don't transpile string literals, check the test page and wait 'till it's green.
(C) 2017 Andrea Giammarchi - MIT Style License