aurelia-binding-functions
An Aurelia plugin that allows you to create bi-directional BindingFunctions in a similar way to ValueConverters or BindingBehaviors.
How to install this plugin?
- In your project install the plugin via
jspm
with following command
jspm install npm:aurelia-binding-functions
- Make Aurelia load the plugin by adding the following line to the
configure
function in the main.js
file of your src
folder
export function configure(aurelia) {
aurelia.use
.standardConfiguration()
.developmentLogging();
+ aurelia.use.plugin('aurelia-binding-functions');
aurelia.start().then(a => a.setRoot());
}
- If you use TypeScript or use Visual Studio Code the type declarations for
aurelia-binding-functions
should be visible automatically.
Using the plugin
You may create a BindingFunction the same way as you would BindingBehaviors or ValueConverters.
The simplest implementation for a one-way binding might look as follows:
export class AsyncBindingFunction implements BindingFunction {
connect(callScope: CallScope, binding: Binding, scope: Scope) {
const promise = callScope.args[0].evaluate(scope, binding.lookupFunctions, true) as Promise<any> & {promiseResult:any}
binding.observeProperty(promise, 'promiseResult')
if (promise.promiseResult === undefined && typeof promise.then === 'function') {
promise.then(value => {
promise.promiseResult = value
})
}
}
evaluate(callScope: CallScope, scope: Scope, lookupFunctions, mustEvaluate: boolean) {
const promise = callScope.args[0].evaluate(scope, lookupFunctions, true) as Promise<any> & {promiseResult:any}
return promise ? promise.promiseResult : undefined
}
}
Now the BindingFunction can be used inside bindings prefixed by @
, i.e. @async()
:
<require from="./async-binding-function"></require>
<h2>${ @async(somePromise) }</h2>
A BindingFunction can implement the following methods:
export interface BindingFunction {
evaluate(bindingFunctionScope: BindingFunctionScope, scope: Scope, lookupFunctions, mustEvaluate: boolean): any
connect?(bindingFunctionScope: BindingFunctionScope, binding: Binding, scope: Scope): void
assign?(bindingFunctionScope: BindingFunctionScope, scope: Scope, value: any, lookupFunctions: any): void
bind?(bindingFunctionScope: BindingFunctionScope, binding: Binding, scope: Scope, lookupFunctions: any): void
unbind?(bindingFunctionScope: BindingFunctionScope, binding: Binding, scope: Scope): void
}
For a one-time binding you only need to implement the evaluate()
method.
A one-way binding will require you to also implement connect()
, while a two-way binding requires you to also implement assign()
.
ScopeFunctions
If you want to create lower-level, global, arbitraitly named Expressions, you may also use ScopeFunctions:
import {ParserImplementation} from 'aurelia-binding';
export function configure(aurelia) {
let parser = aurelia.container.get(ParserImplementation);
parser.registerScopeFunction('@custom', CustomExpression);
}
Where CustomExpression
is a class that implements Expression
.
For references see ast.js.
Dependencies
Used By
This library isn't used by Aurelia. It is an optional plugin.
Platform Support
This library can be used in the browser as well as on the server.
Building The Code
To build the code, follow these steps.
- Ensure that NodeJS is installed. This provides the platform on which the build tooling runs.
- From the project folder, execute the following command:
npm install
- Ensure that Gulp is installed. If you need to install it, use the following command:
npm install -g gulp
- To build the code, you can now run:
gulp build
-
You will find the compiled code in the dist
folder, available in three module formats: AMD, CommonJS and ES6.
-
See gulpfile.js
for other tasks related to generating the docs and linting.
Running The Tests
To run the unit tests, first ensure that you have followed the steps above in order to install all dependencies and successfully build the library. Once you have done that, proceed with these additional steps:
- Ensure that the Karma CLI is installed. If you need to install it, use the following command:
npm install -g karma-cli
- Ensure that jspm is installed. If you need to install it, use the following commnand:
npm install -g jspm
- Install the client-side dependencies with jspm:
jspm install
- You can now run the tests with this command:
karma start