Domestique
A modular DOM helper library.
Installation
npm install domestique
Note: This library is written as ES2015 code and published as such to
npm.
Read the Compatibility section for more information.
Usage
import {
inViewport,
scrollbarSize,
viewportHeight,
viewportWidth,
activeElement,
create,
addClass,
removeClass,
hasClass,
data,
focus,
isFocusable,
isTabbable,
parents,
render,
delegate,
dispatch,
on,
onTransitionEnd,
off,
ready,
closest,
find,
focusable,
matches,
tabbable
} from 'domestique';
API
Dimension
inViewport()
inViewport(element: Element): bool
Returns true
if any part of an element is in the viewport.
Example
const inVp = inViewport(element);
scrollbarSize()
scrollbarSize(): number
Returns the size of the scrollbar in pixels.
Example
const size = scrollbarSize();
viewportHeight()
viewportHeight(): number
Returns the viewport height.
Note: The height represent the CSS viewport height
(@media (height)) including the
size of a rendered scroll bar (if any).
Example
const vpHeight = viewportHeight();
viewportWidth()
viewportWidth(): number
Returns the viewport width.
Note: The width represent the CSS viewport width
(@media (width)) including the
size of a rendered scroll bar (if any).
Example
const vpWidth = viewportWidth();
Element
activeElement()
activeElement(): Element
Returns the element that currently has focus.
Example
const element = activeElement();
create()
create(html: string): Element
Creates a DOM element from a HTML string. If it's already a DOM node, the node
is returned as is.
Example
const element = create('<div/>');
addClass()
addClass(element: Element, className: string): void
Adds a class (or multiple classes separated by space) to an element.
Example
addClass(element, 'my-class');
addClass(element, 'my-class my-other-class');
removeClass()
removeClass(element: Element, className: string): void
Removes a class (or multiple classes separated by space) from an element.
Example
removeClass(element, 'my-class');
removeClass(element, 'my-class my-other-class');
hasClass()
hasClass(element: Element, className: string): bool
Checks whether an element has a class (or multiple classes separated by space).
Example
const hasClass = hasClass(element, 'my-class');
const hasAllClasses = hasClass(element, 'my-class my-other-class');
data()
data(element: Element, name: string): bool
Reads and parses data from an data-* attribute.
Example
<div
data-string="string"
data-true="true"
data-false="false"
data-null="null"
data-integer="1"
data-float="1.2"
data-json-object="{"foo": "bar"}"
data-json-array="["foo"]"
></div>
const stringValue = data(element, 'string');
const trueValue = data(element, 'true');
const falseValue = data(element, 'false');
const nullValue = data(element, 'null');
const integerValue = data(element, 'integer');
const floatValue = data(element, 'float');
const jsonObjectValue = data(element, 'json-object');
const jsonArrayValue = data(element, 'json-array');
focus()
focus(element: Element[, options: object]): void
Shifts focus to an element.
Example
focus(element);
Browsers scroll the focused element into view. focus()
provides an option
restoreScrollPosition
to restore scroll positions of all scroll containers of
the focused element to the state before the element got focus.
Example
focus(element, {
restoreScrollPosition: true
});
isFocusable()
isFocusable(element: Element): bool
Checks whether an element is focusable.
Unlike isTabbable()
, the function also returns true
for
elements which are not focusable by the keyboard, but only by script
(element.focus()
) and possibly the mouse (or pointer). Usually, those are
elements with a negative tabindex
attribute value, like -1
.
Example
const isFocusableElement = isFocusable(element);
isTabbable()
isTabbable(element: Element): bool
Checks whether an element is tabbable.
Unlike isFocusable()
, the function returns true
only for
elements which are focusable by the keyboard (by pressing the TAB and
SHIFT+TAB keys). Elements that are only focusable by
script (element.focus()
) and possibly the mouse (or pointer) are excluded.
Example
const isFocusableElement = isFocusable(element);
parents()
parents(element: Element): Array
Returns an array of the element's parent elements.
Example
const parentElements = parents(element);
render()
render(html: string): object
Creates and returns DOM element references from a HTML string.
Elements must have a ref
attribute with the reference name. The value of this
attribute will get mapped to the property name of the returned object.
Example
const {list, 'list-items': listItems} = render(`
<ul ref="list">
<li ref="list-items[]"></l>
<li ref="list-items[]"></l>
</ul>
`);
Note: The ref
attributes will be removed from the returned elements.
Event
delegate()
delegate(target: EventTarget, type: string, selector: string, listener: EventListener[, options: object]): function
Registers a listener
for the event type
on target
with options
that
processes events from descendant elements of target
matching the specified
selector
.
The function returns another function which can be used to unregister the event listener.
Example
const listener = function (e, target) {
target.classList.add('my-target-clicked');
console.log('My Button clicked');
};
const options = {
passive: true
};
const remove = delegate(
document,
'click',
'.my-button',
listener,
options
);
remove();
dispatch()
dispatch(target: EventTarget, type: string[, eventInit: CustomEventInit]): bool
Dispatches a CustomEvent
type
at the specified target
optionally using the eventInit
options.
The function returns false
if the event is cancelable and at least one of the
event handlers which handled this event called Event.preventDefault()
.
Otherwise it returns true
.
Example
const clickNotCancelled = dispatch(document, 'click');
const myEventNotCancelled = dispatch(
document.querySelector('.my-button'),
'my:event',
{
bubbles: true,
cancelable: true,
detail: {
foo: 'bar'
}
}
);
on()
on(target: EventTarget, type: string, listener: EventListener[, options: object]): function
Registers a listener
for the event type
on target
with options
.
options
is always an object that specifies characteristics about the event
listener, see https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/API/EventTarget/addEventListener.
If one of the options isn't supported by the browser, the behavior is as
follows:
capture
: Always supported.once
: Will be polyfilled.passive
: Will be ignored.
The function returns another function which can be used to unregister the event listener.
Example
const target = document.querySelector('.my-button');
const listener = function () {
console.log('My Button clicked');
};
const options = {
once: true
};
const remove = on(
target,
'click',
listener,
options
);
remove();
onTransitionEnd()
onTransitionEnd(target: EventTarget, listener: EventListener): function
Registers a one-time listener
for the transitionend
event on target
.
The function returns another function which can be used to unregister the event listener.
Example
const target = document.querySelector('.my-element');
const listener = function (target) {
target.classList.add('transition-ended');
console.log('Transition ended');
};
const remove = onTransitionEnd(
target,
listener
);
remove();
off()
off(target: EventTarget, type: string, listener: EventListener[, options: object]): void
Removes a listener previously registered via on()
.
Example
off(
target,
'click',
listener,
options
);
ready()
ready(listener: function): void
Registers a listener to be called once the DOM is ready.
Unlike DOMContentLoaded
, this also works when called after the DOM was loaded.
Example
ready(function () {
console.log('DOM is ready!');
});
Query
closest()
closest(element: Element, selector: string): Element
Returns the closest ancestor of the element
(or the element
itself) which
matches the specified selector
.
If there isn't such an ancestor, it returns null
.
Example
const closestParagraph = closest(element, 'p');
find()
find(selector: string[, element: Element]): array
Returns an array
of elements matching the specified selector
which are
descendants of the document
or the element
specified as optional second
argument.
Example
const paragraphs = find('p');
const spansInsideFirstParagraph = find('spans', paragraphs[0]);
focusable()
focusable([element: Element]): array
Returns an array
of focusable elements in the DOM which are
descendants of the document
or the element
specified as optional second
argument.
Unlike tabbable()
, the array also includes elements which are not
focusable by the keyboard, but only by script (element.focus()
) and possibly
the mouse (or pointer). Usually, those are elements with a negative tabindex
attribute value, like -1
.
Note: The elements in the array are ordered according to the
sequential focus navigation order
which may be different from the DOM order.
Example
const focusableElements = focusable();
matches()
matches(element: Element, selector: string): boolean
Returns true
if the element
would be selected by the specified selector
,
false
otherwise.
Example
const isParagraph = matches(element, 'p');
tabbable()
tabbable([element: Element]): array
Returns an array
of keyboard focusable ("tabbable") elements in the DOM which
are descendants of the document
or the element
specified as optional second
argument.
Unlike focusable()
, the array only includes elements which
are focusable by the keyboard (by pressing the TAB and
SHIFT+TAB keys). Elements that are only focusable by
script (element.focus()
) and possibly the mouse (or pointer) are excluded.
Note: The elements in the array are ordered according to the
sequential focus navigation order
which may be different from the DOM order.
Example
const tabbableElements = tabbable();
Compatibility
This library is written as ES2015 code and published as such to
npm.
It is compatible with
modern browsers
which natively support <script type="module">
.
If support for older browsers is required, code from domestique
must be
transpiled, eg. by using Babel.
Most bundlers (like Webpack and
Rollup) recommend
to not transpile anything from the node_modules/
directory. It must be
ensured, that code from domestique
is not excluded from transpilation.
If you're using Webpack and Babel, that could look like:
{
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.js$/,
exclude: /node_modules\/(?!domestique)/,
loader: 'babel-loader'
}
]
}
}
After transpilation, domestique
supports the
most common browsers including IE 10
without polyfills.
Thank You
- BrowserStack for providing free VMs for automated testing.
- GitHub for providing free Git repository hosting.
- npm for providing the package manager for JavaScript.
- TravisCI for providing a free build server.
License
Copyright (c) 2018 Jan Sorgalla.
Released under the MIT license.