Content-Kit (WARNING: alpha!!) is a WYSIWYG editor supporting rich content via cards. Try a demo at bustlelabs.github.io/content-kit-editor/demo.
- It makes limited use of Content Editable, the siren-song of doomed web editor technologies.
- Content-Kit is designed for rich content. We call these sections of an article "cards", and implementing a new one doesn't require an understanding of Content-Kit internals. Adding a new card takes an afternoon, not several days.
- Posts are serialized to a JSON payload called Mobiledoc instead of to HTML. Mobiledoc can be rendered for the web, mobile web, or in theory on any platform. Mobiledoc is portable and fast.
To learn more about Content-Kit in the abstract, read this announcement blog post.
Content-Kit saves posts to Mobiledoc.
The ContentKit.Editor
class is invoked with an element to render into and
optionally a Mobiledoc to load. For example:
var simpleMobiledoc = {
version: "0.1",
sections: [[], [
[1, "p", [
[[], 0, "Welcome to Content-Kit"]
]]
]]
};
var element = document.querySelector('#editor');
var options = { mobiledoc: simpleMobiledoc };
var editor = new ContentKit.Editor(options);
editor.render(element);
options
is an object which may include the following properties:
placeholder
- default text to show before a user starts typing.spellcheck
- a boolean option enabling spellcheck. Default is true.autofocus
- a boolean option for grabbing input focus when an editor is rendered.cards
- an object describing available cards.
editor.serialize()
- serialize the current post for persistence. Returns Mobiledoc.editor.destroy()
- teardown the editor event listeners, free memory etc.editor.disableEditing()
- stop the user from being able to edit the current post with their cursor. Programmatic edits are still allowed.editor.enableEditing()
- allow the user to make direct edits directly to a post's text.editor.editCard(cardSection)
- change the card to its edit mode (will change immediately if the card is already rendered, or will ensure that when the card does get rendered it will be rendered in the "edit" state initially)editor.displayCard(cardSection)
- same aseditCard
except in display mode.
API consumers may want to react to given interaction by the user (or by a programmatic edit of the post). Lifecyle hooks provide notification of change and opportunity to edit the post where appropriate.
Register a lifecycle hook by calling the hook name on the editor with a callback function. For example:
editor.didUpdatePost(postEditor => {
let { offsets } = editor.cursor,
cursorSection;
if (offset.headSection.text === 'add-section-when-i-type-this') {
let section = editor.builder.createMarkupSection('p');
postEditor.insertSectionBefore(section, cursorSection.next);
cursorSection = section;
}
postEditor.scheduleRerender();
postEditor.schedule(() => {
if (cursorSection) {
editor.moveToSection(cursorSection, 0);
}
});
});
The available lifecycle hooks are:
editor.didUpdatePost(postEditor => {})
- An opportunity to use thepostEditor
and possibly change the post before rendering begins.editor.willRender()
- After all post mutation has finished, but before the DOM is updated.editor.didRender()
- After the DOM has been updated to match the edited post.editor.cursorDidChange()
- When the cursor (or selection) changes as a result of arrow-key movement or clicking in the document.
A major goal of Content-Kit is to allow complete customization of user interfaces using the editing surface. The programmatic editing API allows the creation of completely custom interfaces for buttons, hot-keys, and other interactions.
To change the post in code, use the editor.run
API. For example, the
following usage would mark currently selected text as "strong":
editor.run(postEditor => {
postEditor.toggleMarkup('strong');
});
It is important that you make changes to posts, sections, and markers through
the run
and postEditor
API. This API allows Content-Kit to conserve
and better understand changes being made to the post.
For more details on the API of postEditor
, see the API documentation.
For more details on the API for the builder, required to create new sections and markers, see the builder API.
Content-Kit allows configuring hot keys and text expansions. For instance, the hot-key command-B to make selected text bold, is registered internally as:
const boldKeyCommand = {
str: 'META+B',
run(editor) {
editor.run(postEditor => postEditor.toggleMarkup('strong'));
}
};
editor.registerKeyCommand(boldKeyCommand);
All key commands must have str
and run
properties as shown above.
str
describes the key combination to use and may be a single key, or a modifier and a key separated by +
.
Modifiers can be one of CTRL
, META
or SHIFT
.
The key can be any of the alphanumeric characters on the keyboard, or one of the following special keys:
BACKSPACE
TAB
ENTER
ESC
SPACE
PAGEUP
PAGEDOWN
END
HOME
LEFT
UP
RIGHT
DOWN
INS
DEL
You can override built-in behavior by simply registering a hot key with the same name.
For example, to submit a form instead of entering a new line when enter
is pressed you could do the following:
const enterKeyCommand = {
str: 'enter',
run(editor) {
// submit the form
}
};
editor.registerKeyCommand(enterKeyCommand);
To fall-back to the default behavior, simply return false
from run
.
Text expansions can also be registered with the editor. These are methods that
are run when a text string is entered and then a trigger character is entered.
For example, the text "*"
followed by a space character triggers a method that
turns the current section into a list item. To register a text expansion call
editor.registerExpansion
with an object that has text
, trigger
and run
properties, e.g.:
const expansion = {
trigger: ' ',
text: 'X',
run(editor) {
// use the editor to programmatically change the post
}
};
Fork the repo, write a test, make a change, open a PR.
Install npm and bower:
- Node.js is required
npm install -g npm && npm install -g bower
broccoli
, vianpm install -g broccoli-cli
bower install
npm install
Run tests via the built-in broccoli server:
broccoli serve
open http://localhost:4200/tests
Or run headless tests via testem:
npm test
There is a demo app that uses content-kit and ember-content-kit in demo/
. To run the demo:
cd demo/ && npm install && bower install
ember serve
(shut down your broccoli server if it is already running on port 4200)- visit http://localhost:4200/
npm version patch
orminor
ormajor
npm run build
git push <origin> --follow-tags
npm publish
The demo website is hosted at github pages. To publish a new version:
npm run build-website
- This builds the website intowebsite/
and commits itnpm run deploy-website
- Pushes thewebsite/
subtree to thegh-pages
branch of yourorigin
at github
Visit bustlelabs.github.io/content-kit-editor/demo.
Development of Content-Kit was generously funded by Bustle Labs. Bustle Labs is the tech team behind the editorial staff at Bustle, a fantastic and successful feminist and women’s interest site based in NYC.