Security News
Weekly Downloads Now Available in npm Package Search Results
Socket's package search now displays weekly downloads for npm packages, helping developers quickly assess popularity and make more informed decisions.
@bruit/component
Advanced tools
bruit.io is a Web Component built with Stencil.js
Available on all frameworks that support Web Components such as
bruit.io is a tool to get your users feedbacks, designed to be as simple to use as possible, following the Web Components standards. Users' feedbacks are sent directly to your favorite project management tools 🎉 .
bruit.io is built around an open source Web Component and a backend reciving the users feedback.
And we do no data retention at all about those feedbacks 👏
Installation
Usage
Configuration
BrtConfig
BrtField
BrtLabels
BrtColors
BrtLogLevels
Add data in feedbacks
Handle errors
Frameworks integration
Contributing
Having troubles?
bruit.io can be installed either with a command line
npm install @bruit/component --save
Or by directly modifying your index.html
file
<script src="https://unpkg.com/@bruit/component/dist/bruit.js"></script>
Simply add this tag wherever you want in your project:
<bruit-io> ... optional element to click ... </bruit-io>
These properties are available on the component:
Integration code examples are available for these platforms:
bruit-io
Web Component has aconfig
attribute, which takes a value of BrtConfig type.
Describes the options for the bruit-io
component
interface BrtConfig {
apiKey?: string;
form: Array<BrtField>;
labels?: BrtLabels;
logLevels?: BrtLogLevels;
maxLogLines?: number;
colors?: BrtColors;
closeModalOnSubmit?: boolean;
apiUrl?: string;
}
Attribute | Type | Description | Mandatory | Default value |
---|---|---|---|---|
apiKey | string | your personal api key (create an api key) | no | - |
form | array<BrtField> | inputs list for the generated form | yes | - |
labels | BrtLabels | describes the labels of the modal (title / button / ...) | no | see |
logLevels | BrtLogLevels | Used to filter the logs to send by their level (debug, warn, error, etc) | no | see |
maxLogLines | number | Defines the number of log lines to send in the feedback | no | 100 |
colors | BrtColors | Allows to pick your colors in the modal theming | no | see |
closeModalOnSubmit | boolean | true to have modal closed automatically on submit (feedback is sent in background) | no | false |
apiUrl | string | Allows to use some third party backend for feedback processing | no | https://api.bruit.io/feedback |
Typescript import :
import { BrtConfig } from '@bruit/component';
Describes both the fields displayed in the popup form and the users' answers.
interface BrtField {
id?: string;
label: string;
type: string;
required?: boolean;
value?: any;
}
Attribute | Type | Description | Mandatory |
---|---|---|---|
id | string | Unique identifier for the field | no |
label | string | Placeholder / label for the field | yes |
type | BrtFieldType | The input type of the field | yes |
required | boolean | true to make the field required to send the feedback | no |
value | any | The value typed by the user | no |
BrtConfig.form
must contain one BrtField
with id="agreement"
and type="checkbox"
, used to check whether personal data should be sent with the feedback.
There are special values for the id attribute:
agreement
: sets the field to use to check whether user agrees to send his personal datatitle
: sets the field used to display the title of feedbackTypescript import:
import { BrtField } from '@bruit/component';
Used to describe the texts displayed in the modal.
interface BrtLabels {
title?: string;
introduction?: string;
button?: string;
}
Attribute | Description | Default value |
---|---|---|
title | Defines the title of the modal | bruit.io |
introduction | Defines the description text | send a feedback |
button | Defines the text of the submit button | send |
Typescript import:
import { BrtLabels } from '@bruit/component';
If you feel like an artist 🎨 , you may use BrtColors to change the theme of the modal.
This gives the possiblity to change the header, body, background, errors and focus colors.
Only hexadecimal values are allowed here.
interface BrtColors {
header?: string;
body?: string;
background?: string;
errors?: string;
focus?: string;
}
Attribute | Description | Default value |
---|---|---|
header | the modal's header color | #2D8297 |
body | the color for the background of the modal | #eee |
background | the color used to dim what's behind the modal | #444444ee |
errors | the text color to use for errors | #c31313 |
focus | the color to use on focused field | #1f5a6 |
Typescript import:
import { BrtColors } from '@bruit/component';
By default, all log levels (log, warn, errors, ...) are sent in the feedback. BrtLogLevels
allows to disable specific ones.
To disable a type, just set the related type to false in the logLevels section:
{
"apiKey": "xxxxxxxxxx",
"form": ["..."],
"logLevels": {
"log": false,
...
}
}
interface BrtLogLevels {
log?: boolean;
debug?: boolean;
info?: boolean;
warn?: boolean;
error?: boolean;
network?: boolean;
click?: boolean;
url?: boolean;
}
bruit.io adds special types of logs:
network
type is for your fetch and xmlHttpRequest calls.click
type is for mouse click event.url
type logs all url changingTypescript import:
import { BrtLogLevels } from '@bruit/component';
It is possible to automatically had technical data in the feedback, for example the version number of your application, the identifier of the user sending the feedback, etc.
This is done by using either the data
or dataFn
property on the component.
data
property is used to send an array of objects to add to the feedback to the component.
The property takes a BrtData
array as a value.
dataFn
property takes a function as a value. The function should return either an array of BrtData
or a promise of an array of BrtData
.
Used to pass additional data to the feedback (ie the application version number)
interface BrtData {
label: string;
type?: string;
value: any;
id?: string;
}
Attribute | Type | Description | Mandatory |
---|---|---|---|
label | string | a label for the data | yes |
type | string | the type of the data | no |
value | any | the value to send | yes |
id | string | an identifier for the data | no |
Typescript import:
import { BrtData } from '@bruit/component';
bruit-io
emits onError
events when an error occurs.
An error is of type BrtError
, composed by a code
and a text
.
Format of the errors which may be sent by the component.
interface BrtError {
code: number;
text: string;
}
Typescript import:
import { BrtError } from '@bruit/component';
Integrating bruit-io
component to a project without a JavaScript framework is straight forward. If you're using a simple HTML page, you can add bruit.io component via a script tag.
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/@bruit/component/dist/bruit.js"></script>
</head>
<body>
<bruit-io></bruit-io>
<script>
var bruitCmp = document.querySelector('bruit-io');
bruitCmp.config = {
apiKey: 'xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx',
form: [...]
};
</script>
</body>
</html>
Using bruit-io
component within an Angular project is a two-step process. You need to:
CUSTOM_ELEMENTS_SCHEMA
in the modules that use the componentsdefineCustomElements(window)
from main.ts
(or some other appropriate place)Including the CUSTOM_ELEMENTS_SCHEMA
in the module allows the use of Web Components in the HTML files. Here is an example of adding it to AppModule
:
import { BrowserModule } from '@angular/platform-browser';
import { CUSTOM_ELEMENTS_SCHEMA, NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { AppComponent } from './app.component';
@NgModule({
declarations: [AppComponent],
imports: [BrowserModule],
bootstrap: [AppComponent],
schemas: [CUSTOM_ELEMENTS_SCHEMA]
})
export class AppModule {}
The CUSTOM_ELEMENTS_SCHEMA
needs to be included in any module that uses bruit.io.
bruit.io component includes a function used to load itself in the application window object. That function is called defineCustomElements()
and needs to be executed once during the bootstrapping of your application. One convenient place to add it is in the main.ts
file as follows:
import { enableProdMode } from '@angular/core';
import { platformBrowserDynamic } from '@angular/platform-browser-dynamic';
import { AppModule } from './app/app.module';
import { environment } from './environments/environment';
import { defineCustomElements } from '@bruit/component/dist/loader';
if (environment.production) {
enableProdMode();
}
platformBrowserDynamic()
.bootstrapModule(AppModule)
.catch(err => console.log(err));
defineCustomElements(window);
<bruit-io
[config]="bruitConfig"
[data]="bruitData"
[dataFn]="bruitDataPromise()"
(onError)="handleBruitError($event)"
></bruit-io>
public bruitConfig: BrtConfig = {
apiKey:"xxxxxxxxxxx",
form:[...]
};
public bruitData: Array<BrtData> = [
{
label:"version",
value: environment.version
}
];
constructor(private api : ApiService){}
bruitDataPromise(): Promise<Array<BrtData>>{
return this.api.getUser().then( user =>
[
{
label: "user id",
value: user.id
},
{
label: "user email",
value: user.email
}
]
);
}
handleBruitError(error: BrtError){
...
}
With an application built using React CLI (namely create-react-app
), the easiest way is to include the bruit-io
component by calling the defineCustomElements(window)
method in the index.js
file.
import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import './index.css';
import App from './App';
import registerServiceWorker from './registerServiceWorker';
import { defineCustomElements } from '@bruit/component/dist/loader';
ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.getElementById('root'));
registerServiceWorker();
defineCustomElements(window);
In order to use the bruit-io
Web Component inside of a Vue application, it should be modified to define the custom elements and to inform the Vue compiler which elements to ignore during compilation. This can all be done within the main.js
file as follows:
import Vue from 'vue';
import App from './App.vue';
import { defineCustomElements } from '@bruit/component/dist/loader';
Vue.config.productionTip = false;
Vue.config.ignoredElements = [/bruit-\w*/];
defineCustomElements(window);
new Vue({
render: h => h(App)
}).$mount('#app');
Bruit.io web component is 100% free and open source. Contributing to bruit.io may involve writing TypeScript, TSX, Stencil, SCSS or Markdown depending on the component you are working on. We are looking for help in any of these areas!
FAQs
send your feedbacks with bruit.io
The npm package @bruit/component receives a total of 208 weekly downloads. As such, @bruit/component popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @bruit/component demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 3 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
Socket's package search now displays weekly downloads for npm packages, helping developers quickly assess popularity and make more informed decisions.
Security News
A Stanford study reveals 9.5% of engineers contribute almost nothing, costing tech $90B annually, with remote work fueling the rise of "ghost engineers."
Research
Security News
Socket’s threat research team has detected six malicious npm packages typosquatting popular libraries to insert SSH backdoors.