- Website: https://stimulusjs.org/
- GitHub repo: https://github.com/stimulusjs/stimulus
- Handbook: https://stimulusjs.org/handbook/introduction
- Discourse: https://discourse.stimulusjs.org/
initialize
: once, when the controller is first instantiatedconnect
: anytime the controller is connected to the DOMdisconnect
: anytime the controller is disconnected from the DOM
The data-action value click->hello#greet
is called an action descriptor. This particular descriptor says:
click
is the event namehello
is the controller identifiergreet
is the name of the method to invoke
Stimulus defines click as the default event for actions on <button>
elements. Certain other elements have default events, too. Here’s the full list:
a
>click
button
>click
form
>submit
input
>change
input
>type=submit click
select
>change
textarea
>change
If an element has muliple actions you can separate each one with a space click->hello#greet click->hello#save
.
The element can even have multiple actions for multiple controllers click->hello#greet click->history#save
.
The data-target value hello.name
is called a target descriptor. This particular descriptor says:
hello
is the controller identifiername
is the target name
When Stimulus loads your controller class, it looks for target name strings in a static array called targets. For each target name in the array, Stimulus adds three new properties to your controller. Here, our source
target name becomes the following properties:
this.sourceTarget
evaluates to the first source target in your controller’s scope. If there is no source target, accessing the property throws an error.this.sourceTargets
evaluates to an array of all source targets in the controller’s scope.this.hasSourceTarget
evaluates to true if there is a source target or false if not.
If an element is a target for multiple controllers you can separate each one with a space hello.name history.text
Component | Convention | Rationale |
---|---|---|
Controller filenames | snake_case.js | Rails works that way |
Identifiers | kebab-case | Sometimes used as part of HTML attribute names; analogous to CSS classes, which are conventionally kebab-case |
Action names | camelCase | Map directly to JavaScript controller methods |
Target names | camelCase | Map directly to JavaScript controller properties |
Data attributes | camelCase + kebab-case | Thin wrapper around the HTMLElement.dataSet API; camelCase names in JS, kebab-case attributes in HTML |
Each Stimulus controller has a this.data
object with has()
, get()
, and set()
methods. These methods provide convenient access to data attributes on the controller’s element, scoped by the controller’s identifier.
For example, in our controller above:
this.data.has("index")
returnstrue
if the controller’s element has adata-slideshow-index
attributethis.data.get("index")
returns the string value of the element’sdata-slideshow-index
attributethis.data.set("index", index)
sets the element’sdata-slideshow-index
attribute to the string value of index
If your attribute name consists of more than one word, reference it as camelCase in JavaScript and attribute-case in HTML. For example, you can read the data-slideshow-current-class-name
attribute with this.data.get("currentClassName")
.
e.g. <div data-controller="ControllerName">
e.g. Multiple controllers on the same element: <div data-controller="ControllerName AnotherControllerName">
e.g. <input data-target="ControllerName.TargetName"
>
e.g. <button data-action="eventName->ControllerName#methodName">Click me</button>
e.g. Multiple actions on the same element: <button data-action="eventName->ControllerName#methodName anotherEventName->ControllerName#anotherMethodName">Click me</button>
import { Controller } from "stimulus"
export default class extends Controller {
static targets = []
// or
static get targets () {
return []
}
initialize () {}
connect () {}
disconnect () {}
}
Example HTML from the Stimulus home page
<div data-controller="hello">
<input data-target="hello.name" type="text">
<button data-action="click->hello#greet">
Greet
</button>
<span data-target="hello.output">
</span>
</div>