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@teamthread/elm-web-components
Advanced tools
A small JavaScript package to let you wrap your Elm applications up in a web component.
Only supports the V1 web component spec.
yarn add @teamthread/elm-web-components
We support both Elm 0.18 and 0.19. You must configure the module so it knows which one to support:
elmWebComponents.configure('0.18')
// OR:
elmWebComponents.configure('0.19')
You will get an error and the library will not work without this configuration step.
Given the following Elm app:
module Main exposing (..)
import Html exposing (text, Html)
import Browser
type Msg
= NoOp
type alias Model =
{ name : String
}
update : Msg -> Model -> ( Model, Cmd Msg )
update msg model =
( model, Cmd.none )
view : Model -> Html Msg
view model =
text ("Hello world, my name is: " ++ model.name)
type alias Flags =
{ name : String }
init : Flags -> ( Model, Cmd Msg )
init flags =
( Model flags.name, Cmd.none )
main : Program Flags Model Msg
main =
Browser.element
{ init = init, update = update, subscriptions = \_ -> Sub.none, view = view }
You can create a custom web element that will render it like so:
import elmWebComponents from '@teamthread/elm-web-components'
import ElmApp from './Main.elm'
elmWebComponents.register('demo-elm-component', ElmApp.Main)
And now in your HTML you can use the component:
<demo-elm-component name="Jack"></demo-elm-component>
Any attributes are passed into your Elm app as Flags.
By default Elm will render inside your custom element directly, if you want to isolate the Elm renderer dom using shadow dom you can register the custom element like this:
import elmWebComponents from '@teamthread/elm-web-components'
import ElmApp from './Main.elm'
elmWebComponents.register('demo-elm-component', ElmApp.Main, {useShadowDom: true})
You can also hook up a component that uses ports. The third argument to elmWebComponents.register
is an object that can take a function that will be called with the ports object that Elm provides, so you can then hook into it and subscribe
and send
to them as you would normally:
elmWebComponents.register('component-with-ports', ComponentWithPorts, {
setupPorts: ports => {
ports.somePort.send(1)
ports.someOtherPort.subscribe(data => {
// deal with port here
})
},
})
Sometimes you will want to pass in flags not only via HTML attributes, but from JavaScript. The third argument to elmWebComponents.register
takes a staticFlags
object which will be passed in:
elmWebComponents.register('component-with-ports', ComponentWithPorts, {
setupPorts: ports => {},
staticFlags: {
someCustomProp: 'foo',
},
})
Now, rendering the component like so:
<component-with-ports name="Jack"></component-with-ports>
Will pass through two flags: someCustomProp
and name
. Note that currently if a static flag and a passed attribute have the same name, the static flag takes priority.
Sometimes you might want to pre-process the flags a bit in Javascript before giving them to Elm. For example, all the attributes from the DOM are strings, but you might want to make one of them an integer:
elmWebComponents.register('component-with-ports', ComponentWithPorts, {
mapFlags: flags => {
const someId = parseInt(flags.someId)
return Object.assign({}, flags, { someId })
},
})
Rendering the component with:
<component-with-ports some-id="1"></component-with-ports>
Will pass the flags as { someId : Int }
, rather than { someId : String }
.
onDetached
If you need to do some work when the Elm component is removed from the DOM, you can now pass onDetached: () => ...
as another option:
elmWebComponents.register('component-with-ports', ComponentWithPorts, {
setupPorts: ports => {},
staticFlags: {
someCustomProp: 'foo',
},
onDetached: () => {
console.log('Called when the component is removed from the DOM')
},
})
This is useful for tidying up any event listeners you might have.
If you want to catch any errors registering the component, you can pass onSetupError
:
elmWebComponents.register('component-with-ports', ComponentWithPorts, {
onSetupError: error => {
console.log('Something went wrong', error)
},
})
You can find full examples in the example
directory. If you have cloned the repository, you can run yarn run example-018
or yarn run example-019
to run them locally.
elm-web-components does not ship with any polyfills. You should ensure the following functions are available in all browsers you support:
Object.assign
Object.keys
And additionally ensure that you've included a polyfill for custom elements. We recommend document-register-element.
FAQs
Run your Elm apps through web components.
The npm package @teamthread/elm-web-components receives a total of 992 weekly downloads. As such, @teamthread/elm-web-components popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @teamthread/elm-web-components demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 4 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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