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This library allows you to embed Kefir observables into React Virtual DOM.

NOTE: This library has been superseded by the Karet library.

Usage

The prelifted classes can be accessed from the default import:

import K from "kefir.react.html"

The names of the prelifted classes are the same as in React.DOM.

Lifted classes

A lifted class eliminates Kefir observables that appear as attributes or direct children of the produced element. For example, using the lifted class K.div, you could write

<K.div>Hello, {observable}!</K.div>

where observable refers to a Kefir observable. The resulting div always shows the latest value produced by the observable.

Aside from children, lifting of observables also descends into individual style attribute values.

Mount attribute

The mount attribute on a lifted element

<K.input mount={c => c && c.focus()}/>

does the same thing as the ordinary JSX ref attribute: JSX/React treats it as a special case, so it had to be renamed.

Bind attribute template

The bind attribute template

import {bind} from "kefir.react.html"

can be used to bind an attribute, e.g. value or checked, to an object with a set method such as a Kefir.Atom:

const settable = Atom("")
...
<K.input type="text"
         mount={c => c && c.focus()}
         {...bind({value: settable})}/>

bind is just an ordinary function that extends the given object, above {value: settable}, with an onChange attribute containing a function that copies the attribute, above value, from the event target to the attribute object, above settable.

Classes attribute template

The classes attribute template

import {classes} from "kefir.react.html"

offers a way to specify className with conditional content depending on observables. For example:

...
<K.div {...classes("unconditional",
                   condition && "conditional",
                   condition ? "true" : "false",
                   observable.map(c => c && "conditional-and-observable"))}>
    Not too classy?</K.div>

classes(...) extends to an object of the form {className: string | observable}.

Nesting

A single lifted class, like K.input, eliminates Kefir observables only when they are immediately contained attributes or children of the element. So, you can safely nest lifted elements:

const checked = Atom(false)
...
<K.div>
  <K.label htmlFor="likes-kefir">Kefir is tasty:</K.label>
  <K.input type="checkbox"
           id="likes-kefir"
           {...bind({checked})}/>
  <K.div hidden={checked}><K.em>Are you sure?</K.em></K.div>
</K.div>

Note, however, that only those elements that immediately contain observables must be lifted, because React will choke on plain Kefir. So, the above could also have been written as:

const checked = Atom(false)
...
<div>
  <label htmlFor="likes-kefir">Kefir is tasty:</label>
  <K.input type="checkbox"
           id="likes-kefir"
           {...bind({checked})}/>
  <K.div hidden={checked}><em>Are you sure?</em></K.div>
</div>

For best performance this latter version is preferable.

Lifting and Patching

If you need a lifted version of a HTML class that is not already lifted, you can use fromClass:

import K, {fromClass} from "kefir.react.html"
...
K.special = fromClass("special")

There is also fromClasses that lifts an object of classes to an object of lifted classes. For example, given

import {fromClasses} from "kefir.react.html"
...
const L = fromClasses({Some, Custom, Classes})

then L.Some, L.Custom and L.Classes are lifted versions of Some, Custom and Classes.

From Kefir

fromClass and the prelifted classes handle the cases where the class of the element is statically known or the element is a child of some element. In case the class of a top-most element depends on a Kefir observable, one can use fromKefir:

import {fromKefir} from "kefir.react.html"
...
const choice = Atom(false)
...
fromKefir(choice.map(c => c ? <True/> : <False/>))

Combining properties

For notational convenience, the default import

import K from "kefir.react.html"

is also a generalized observable combiner designed for combining properties to be embedded into VDOM.

NOTE: K is not designed to be used as general purpose observable combinator. It is designed for the particular use case of combining properties to be embedded into VDOM.

The basic semantics of K can be described as

K(x1, ..., xN, fn) === combine([x1, ..., xN], fn).skipDuplicates(equals)

where combine and skipDuplicates come from Kefir and equals from Ramda. We skip duplicates, because that avoids some unnecessary updates. Ramda's equals provides a semantics of equality that works, for immutable data, just the way we like.

Note: K is carefully optimized for space—if you write equivalent combinations using Kefir's own operators, they will likely take more memory.

Unlike with combine, any argument of K is allowed to be

  • a constant,
  • an observable (including the combiner function), or
  • an array or object containing observables. In other words, K also provides functionality similar to combineTemplate.

When K is invoked with only constants (no observables), then the result is computed immediately and returned as a plain value. This optimization eliminates redundant observables.

Incremental arrays fromIds

For efficient construction of arrays of elements, the fromIds

import {fromIds} from "kefir.react.html"

combinator is provided. It can be seen to have the following type:

fromIds :: (Show id) => Observable [id] -> (id -> a) -> Property [a]

fromIds(idsObs, fromId) assumes that the given fromId function is pure. It then stores and reuses the return values of fromId between changes of the idsObs observable. Assuming idsObs does not produce changes unnecessarily, fromIds allows large arrays of elements to be updated incrementally.

Longer examples

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Embed Kefir observables into React Virtual DOM

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