Cascade
A JavaScript/TypeScript library for creating modern user interfaces. It combines Reactive ViewModels with Functional DOM Components to create seamless flow of data.
Reactive ViewModels
Cascade builds ViewModels with reactive properties to synchronize data. Properties may be marked as observable, so that changes may be watched, or computed, which then watch for changes in related observables. With this, a dynamic tree of data may be built, all which is updated automatically.
Furthermore, any Functional DOM Component which references an observable or computed, will be updated automatically.
TypeScript decorators
Simply use the @observable
decorator, which will automatically detect if the property is a value, an array, or a getter function. Computed values must be declared as a getter, and arrays must be declared with their types.
Note: Decorators depend on TypeScript. You must set "experimentalDecorators": true
in your tsconfig.json
file.
class User {
@observable firstName: string = '';
@observable lastName: string = '';
@observable get fullName() {
return this.firstName + ' ' + this.lastName;
}
@observable list: number[] = [1, 2, 3, 4];
}
Note: Type detection for arrays depends on the optional package reflect-metadata
. You must also set "emitDecoratorMetadata": true
in your tsconfig.json
file. For IE10 and below, you must also include es6-shim
or similar polyfills. If you don't wish to install polyfills, then you must use @array
instead of @observable
.
JavaScript usage
You may also create observable properties directly.
Cascade.createObservable<T>(obj: any, property: string, value?: T);
Cascade.createObservableArray<T>(obj: any, property: string, value?: Array<T>);
Cascade.createComputed<T>(obj: any, property: string, definition: (n?: T) => T, defer?: boolean, setter?: (n: T) => any);
You may also create the observables as objects. Keep in mind, these are accessed as methods instead of direct usage.
Observable<T>(value?: T);
ObservableArray<T>(value?: Array<T>);
Computed<T>(definition: (n?: T) => T, defer: boolean = false, thisArg?: any, setter?: (n: T) => any);
Functional DOM Components
Cascade uses either JSX or direct JavaScript calls to create a Virtual Dom. These Virtual Nodes can then be rendered into DOM Nodes for display.
Cascade.createElement<T extends Object>(
type: string | Component,
props: T,
...children: Array<IVirtualNode<any> | string>
): IVirtualNode<any>;
Components may be defined by simply extending the Component class. Any property which references an observable will cause the Component to render any time the observable updates.
interface IUserViewProps {
user: User;
}
class UserView extends Component<IUserViewProps> {
render() {
return (
<div>{this.props.user.fullName}</div>
);
}
}
Using Components
Components can then be rendered by either calling
Cascade.createElement(UserView, { user: User });
or with JSX by calling
<UserView user={User} />
Note Using JSX requires the options "jsx": "react"
and "reactNamespace": "Cascade"
in your tsconfig.json
file. Cascade
must also be imported into any .jsx
or .tsx
file.
Component and VirtualNode Properties
Components and VirtualNodes have optional props
key: string
Specifying a key
for a Component or VirtualNode will improve rendering speeds in certain cases. This is a string, which should be unique to that node within its parent. It is most useful for a set of children which change often, such as arrays or conditional children.
ref: (n: Node) => void
A ref
callback will receive the resulting Node
whenever the Component or VirtualNode is rendered for the first time. This is useful for directly modifying the Node
after rendering.
Rendering
Cascade will render directly to any DOM node specified. Simply call
Cascade.render(
node: HTMLElement | string,
virtualNode: IVirtualNode<any>,
callback?: (n: Node) => any
): void;
For example
Cascade.render(
document.getElementById('root'),
<UserView user={User} />
);