This is now unmaintained because a repo was created from this idea: https://github.com/skatejs/val
The goal of this wrapper is to provide a consistent interface across all virtual DOM solutions that provide a hyperscript-style virtual DOM function. This includes, but is not limited to:
- React
- Preact
- Virtual DOM
- Hyperscript (any implementation)
- ...
The problems these different implemenations face is that the only common thing is the function that you invoke and the arguments that it accepts, at a top level. However, they all behave differently with the arguments you give them.
For example, React will only set props on DOM elements that are in its whitelist. Preact will set props on DOM elements if they are in element
. There's problems with each of these.
The problem with React is that you can't pass complex data structures to DOM elements that have properties that aren't in their whitelist, which every web component would be subject to.
With Preact, it's mostly good. However, the assumption is that your custom element definition is defined prior to Preact creating the DOM element in its virtual DOM implementation. This will fail if your custom element definitions are loaded asynchronously, which is not uncommon when wanting to defer the loading of non-critical resources.
Theres other issues such as React not working at all with custom events.
The best solution I've come across so far is to create a wrapper that works for any of these. The wrapper enables several things:
- Ability to pass a custom element constructor as the node name (first argument)
- Explicit control over which attributes to set (via
attrs: {}
in the second argument) - Explicit control over which events are bound (via
events: {}
in the second argument) - Explicit control over which props are set (anything that isn't
attrs
orevents
in the second argument) - Everything else is just passed through and subject to the standard behaviour of whatever library you're using
This assumes that whatever library you're wrapping has support for a ref
callback as a common way for us to get access to the raw DOM element that we need to use underneath the hood.
The usage is simple. You import the wrapper and invoke it with the only argument being the virtual DOM function that you want it to wrap.
React:
import { createElement } from 'react';
import makeCreateElement from './make-create-element';
export makeCreateElement(createElement);
Preact:
import { h } from 'preact';
import makeH from './make-create-element';
export makeH(h);
In your components, you'd then import your wrapped function instead of the one from the library.
/** @jsx h */
import h from 'your-wrapper';
import { PureComponent } from 'react';
import { render } from 'react-dom';
class WebComponent extends HTMLElement {}
class ReactComponent extends PureComponent {
render () {
return <WebComponent />;
}
}
render(<ReactComponent />, document.getElementById('root'));
Attributes are specified using the attrs
object.
import h from 'your-wrapper';
h('my-element', {
attrs: {
'my-attribute': 'some value'
}
});
Events are bound using the events
object. This works for any events, including custom events.
import h from 'your-wrapper';
h('my-element', {
events: {
click () {},
customevent () {}
}
});
Properties are categorised as anything that is not attrs
or events
.
h('my-element', {
someProp: true
});
You can also use your web component constructor instead of the name that was passed to customElements.define()
.
// So we have the reference to pass to h().
class WebComponent extends HTMLElement {}
// It must be defined first.
customElements.define('web-component', WebComponent);
// Now we can use it.
h(WebComponent);
- If any specified
children
are real DOM nodes, they should be converted to virtual DOM nodes.
Although in the spirit of your suggestions let me put forth:
http://www.ruthlessreviews.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/TOP-GUN-ICEMAN1.jpg
"Iceman" or "Ice"