npm install hyperaxe
const { body, h1 } = require('hyperaxe')
body(
h1('hello world')
)
// => <body><h1>hello world</h1></body>
Exports all HTML tags.
const { a, img, video } = require('hyperaxe')
a({ href: '#' }, 'click')
// <a href="#">click</a>
img({ src: 'cats.gif', alt: 'lolcats' })
// <img src="cats.gif" alt="lolcats">
video({ src: 'dogs.mp4', autoplay: true })
// <video src="dogs.mp4" autoplay="true"></video>
Default export accepts a tag and returns an element factory.
const x = require('hyperaxe')
const p = x('p')
p('over 9000')
// <p>over 9000</p>
CSS shorthand works too.
const x = require('hyperaxe')
const horse = x('.horse.with-hands')
horse('neigh')
// <div class="horse with-hands">neigh</div>
Makes creating custom components easy.
const x = require('hyperaxe')
const siteNav = (...links) => x('nav.site')(
links.map(link =>
x('a.link')({ href: link.href }, link.text)
)
)
x.body(
siteNav(
{ href: '#apps', text: 'apps' },
{ href: '#games', text: 'games' }
)
)
// <body>
// <nav class="site">
// <a class="link" href="#apps">apps</a>
// <a class="link" href="#games">games</a>
// </nav>
// </body>
Here's a counter increment example using nanochoo
:
const { body, button, h1 } = require('hyperaxe')
const nano = require('nanochoo')
const app = nano()
app.use(store)
app.view(view)
app.mount('body')
function view (state, emit) {
return body(
h1(`count is ${state.count}`),
button({ onclick }, 'Increment')
)
function onclick () {
emit('increment', 1)
}
}
function store (state, emitter) {
state.count = 0
emitter.on('increment', function (count) {
state.count += count
emitter.emit('render')
})
}
hyperaxe(tag) => ([props], [...children]) => HTMLElement
tag
string - valid HTML tag name or CSS shorthand (required)props
object - HTML attributes (optional)children
node, string, number, array - child nodes or primitives (optional)
Returns a function that creates HTML elements.
The factory is variadic, so any number of children are accepted.
x('.variadic')(
x('h1')('hi'),
x('h2')('hello'),
x('h3')('hey'),
x('h4')('howdy')
)
Arrays of children also work.
const kids = [
x('p')('Once upon a time,'),
x('p')('there was a variadic function,'),
x('p')('that also accepted arrays.')
]
x('.arrays')(kids)
In a browser context, the object returned by the factory is an HTMLElement
object. In a server (node) context, the object returned is an instance of html-element
. In both contexts, the stringified HTML is accessible via the outerHTML
attribute.
All HTML tags are attached to hyperaxe
as keys.
They return the same function as described above, with the tag
argument prefilled.
Think of it as a kind of partial application.
The main motivation for doing this is convenience.
const { p } = require('hyperaxe')
p('this is convenient')
You can pass raw HTML by setting the innerHTML
property of an element.
const { div } = require('hyperaxe')
div({ innerHTML: '<p>Raw HTML!' })
Creates a hyperaxe
element factory for a given hyperscript implementation (h
).
If you use another implementation than hyperscript
proper, you can exclude that dependency by using require('hyperaxe/factory')
. For the time being, no other implementations are tested though, so wield at your own peril!
Same as createFactory
, except it only creates a new factory on the first call and returns a cached version after that.
- Summons DOM nodes.
- +1 vs. virtual DOM nodes.
- Grants Haste.
- html-tags: List of standard HTML tags.
- hyperscript: Create HyperText with JavaScript, on client or server.
- standard: JavaScript Standard Style.
- standard-version: Replacement for
npm version
with automatic CHANGELOG generation. - tape: tap-producing test harness for node and browsers.
This library's approach and API are heavily inspired by reaxe.
Contributors welcome! Please read the contributing guidelines before getting started.
Axe image is from emojidex.