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@smui/common
Advanced tools
Common Label and Icon components, Element component, and helper utilities.
npm install --save-dev @smui/common
https://sveltematerialui.com/demo/common
A common label.
The common label is used everywhere that exports a Label
component.
component
: Span
- A component to use as the root element.use
: []
- An array of Svelte actions and/or arrays of an action and its options.class
: ''
- A CSS class string.A common icon.
The common icon is used everywhere that exports an Icon
component except for textfield
and select
.
component
: I
- A component to use as the root element.use
: []
- An array of Svelte actions and/or arrays of an action and its options.class
: ''
- A CSS class string.on
: false
- Used in the context of an icon button toggle to denote the icon for when the button is on.A dynamic HTML element component.
use
: []
- An array of Svelte actions and/or arrays of an action and its options.tag
: 'div'
- An HTML tag name to use as the element.An SVG tag component. This is separated from the SmuiElement
component, because it returns a SVGSVGElement
object, which does not implement the HTMLElement
interface.
use
: []
- An array of Svelte actions and/or arrays of an action and its options.Helper utilities are exported from the @smui/common/internal
endpoint. They are used within SMUI to provide additional functionality outside of the features the Svelte API is natively capable of. You can use them in your own components to provide the same additional functionality.
classAdderBuilder
and forwardEventsBuilder
use internal Svelte features. Since they depend on svelte/internal
, you should consider use of them the same way you consider use of svelte/internal
directly.
Build a class string from a map of class names to conditions. This is useful when you need to add classes to a component, since Svelte's "class:" directives don't work on components. (It's also useful for actions that take addClass
and removeClass
functions.)
<SomeComponent
class={classMap({
'my-always-on-class': true,
'my-conditional-class': condition,
...internalClasses,
})}
>
I've got class.
</SomeComponent>
<script lang="ts">
import SomeComponent from './SomeComponent.svelte';
export let condition = true;
let internalClasses: { [k: string]: boolean } = {};
export function addClass(className: string) {
if (!internalClasses[className]) {
internalClasses[className] = true;
}
}
export function removeClass(className: string) {
if (!(className in internalClasses) || internalClasses[className]) {
internalClasses[className] = false;
}
}
</script>
Dispatch a custom event. This differs from Svelte's component event system, because these events require a DOM element as a target, can bubble (and do by default), and are cancelable with event.preventDefault()
. All SMUI events are dispatched with this instead of Svelte's createEventDispatcher
.
<div
bind:this={eventTarget}
on:mouseover={emitEvent}
on:click={emitCancelableEvent}
tabindex={0}
/>
<script lang="ts">
import { dispatch } from '@smui/common/internal';
let eventTarget;
function emitEvent(originalEvent: Event) {
dispatch(eventTarget, 'MyCustomEvent', { originalEvent });
// You would access originalEvent with `event.detail.originalEvent`.
}
function emitCancelableEvent(originalEvent: Event) {
const event = dispatch(
eventTarget,
'MyCustomEvent',
{ originalEvent },
{
bubbles: true,
cancelable: true,
}
);
if (!event.defaultPrevented) {
alert('The event was not canceled!');
}
}
</script>
Exclude a set of properties from an object. It differs from normal omit
functions by also excluding all properties that begin with a given string if that string ends with "$". It is usually used along with prefixFilter
to allow props to be given to multiple elements within a component.
<!-- MyComponent.svelte -->
<div class="my-component {className}" {...exclude($$restProps, ['button$'])}>
<button
on:click
class="button {button$class}"
{...prefixFilter($$restProps, 'button$')}
>
<slot />
</button>
</div>
<script lang="ts">
import { exclude, prefixFilter } from '@smui/common/internal';
let className = '';
export { className as class };
export let button$class = '';
</script>
<MyComponent
class="my-class"
button$disabled={disabled}
on:click={() => (disabled = true)}
>
Click Me Only Once
</MyComponent>
<script lang="ts">
import MyComponent from './MyComponent.svelte';
let disabled = false;
</script>
Build an action to allow all events to be forwarded from a Svelte component, with support for event modifiers using the "$" syntax.
This is especially useful for UI library components, as it is generally unknown which events will be required from them for all desired use cases. For example, if a Button component only forwards a click
event, then no use case that requires the mouseover
or the keypress
event can be used with it.
In addition, a component that uses Svelte's built in event forwarding system cannot allow event listeners on the "capture" phase of the event lifecycle. It also cannot allow events to be cancelable with the browser's built in preventDefault
function. In fact, the one big advantage to Svelte's event system, the fact that you don't need an element as an event target, doesn't even apply to UI library components.
<!-- MyComponent.svelte -->
<div use:forwardEvents tabindex="0">
<slot />
</div>
<script lang="ts">
import { forwardEventsBuilder } from '@smui/common/internal';
// @ts-ignore Need to use internal Svelte function
import { get_current_component } from 'svelte/internal';
const forwardEvents = forwardEventsBuilder(get_current_component());
</script>
<MyComponent
on:click={() => console.log('Click!')}
on:mouseover={() => console.log('Mouseover!')}
on:touchstart$passive={() => console.log("Touchstart, and it's passive!")}
on:keypress$preventDefault$stopPropagation={() =>
console.log('No key presses!')}
>
Listen to my events!
</MyComponent>
<script lang="ts">
import MyComponent from './MyComponent.svelte';
</script>
Filter an object for only properties with a certain prefix. It is usually used along with exclude
to allow props to be given to multiple elements within a component.
<!-- MyComponent.svelte -->
<div class="my-component {className}" {...exclude($$restProps, ['button$'])}>
<button
on:click
class="button {button$class}"
{...prefixFilter($$restProps, 'button$')}
>
<slot />
</button>
</div>
<script lang="ts">
import { exclude, prefixFilter } from '@smui/common/internal';
let className = '';
export { className as class };
export let button$class = '';
</script>
<MyComponent
class="my-class"
button$disabled={disabled}
on:click={() => (disabled = true)}
>
Click Me Only Once
</MyComponent>
<script lang="ts">
import MyComponent from './MyComponent.svelte';
let disabled = false;
</script>
An action that takes actions and runs them on the element. Used to allow actions on components, and forward actions from one component to another, until the ultimate component finally renders the DOM element.
<!-- MyComponent.svelte -->
<div use:useActions={use}>
<slot />
</div>
<script lang="ts">
import type { ActionArray } from '@smui/common/internal';
import { useActions } from '@smui/common/internal';
export let use: ActionArray = [];
</script>
<MyComponent use={[SomeAction]}>I use an action!</MyComponent>
<MyComponent use={[SomeAction, [SomeOtherAction, { someOption: true }]]}>
I use two actions! And one has options!
</MyComponent>
<script lang="ts">
import MyComponent from './MyComponent.svelte';
import SomeAction from './SomeAction.js';
import SomeOtherAction from './SomeOtherAction.js';
</script>
A function that announces a string of text to users who are using a screen reader.
<!--
Note that this is not the proper way to annotate a button for screen readers.
It's just an example.
-->
<Button
on:focus={() =>
announce("Don't push this button!", { priority: 'assertive' })}
style="background-color: red; color: white; transform: scale(2);"
>
Big Red Button
</Button>
<script lang="ts">
import { announce } from '@smui/common/internal';
</script>
These components are not exported in the index file, but are available to be imported elsewhere. They are generally used for simple components which only add a class to an element.
A fragment component (only contains a <slot />
) used to define a Svelte context with a Svelte store.
key
: undefined
- The key of the Svelte context.value
: undefined
- The value of the store contained in the Svelte context. The store will be updated when the value changes.A base component that adds a class to an element. The ClassAdder is used to provide simple components. It usually uses the SmuiElement
component shown above, but you can specify a different component for it to use.
component
: (depends on context)
- The component to extend. Usually it is set to SmuiElement
.tag
: (depends on context)
- The HTML tag name SmuiElement
will use.use
: []
- An array of Svelte actions and/or arrays of an action and its options.class
: ''
- A CSS class string.Use this to build a ClassAdder component. ClassAdder components are useful for reducing the size of your bundle. If you have tons of simple components that just need to add classes/props or set a context, using ClassAdder components means there's only one actual Svelte component in your bundle for all of these many tiny components.
import { classAdderBuilder } from '@smui/common/classadder';
export default classAdderBuilder({
class: 'my-added-class',
tag: 'div',
});
You can also supply a component that implements the SmuiComponent
interface.
import { classAdderBuilder } from '@smui/common/classadder';
import Button from '@smui/button';
export default classAdderBuilder({
class: 'my-added-class',
component: Button,
});
component
: SmuiElement
- An SMUI compatible component.tag
: 'div'
- An HTML tag name. (Only means anything for the SmuiElement
component.)class
: ''
- The class to add.classMap
: {}
- A map of classes to contexts. The context should resolve to a Svelte store, and the class will be added if the Svelte store's value is true.contexts
: {}
- A map of contexts to values to set for them.props
: {}
- A map of props to add to the element.FAQs
Svelte Material UI - Common
The npm package @smui/common receives a total of 12,226 weekly downloads. As such, @smui/common popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @smui/common demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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