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require(esm) Backported to Node.js 20, Paving the Way for ESM-Only Packages
require(esm) backported to Node.js 20, easing the transition to ESM-only packages and reducing complexity for developers as Node 18 nears end-of-life.
EXPERIMENTAL
TODO: tests, types, compatibility (currently requires ES6 support, Proxies)
Adds this.el
to a custom element, allowing the definition of internal element references via ref="<name>"
HTML attrs placed on child elements. Child elements are then accessible at this.el.<name>
.
this.el
provides getters at every key that will lazily query the parent for the first child element with a matching ref="<name>"
attribute (undefined
if no matching children are found).
this.el.list.<name>
behaves similarily but queries for all matching children and returns an array (empty array if no matching children are found).
Results will be cached and returned as long as they are still attached to DOM
An example is worth a thousand words (LitElement used for HTML-rendering simplicity):
import ElRef from 'elref';
class MyElement extends LitElement {
constructor() {
super(...arguments);
this.el = new ElRef(this);
}
render() {
return html`
<div ref="foo">
<div ref="bar"></div>
<div ref="bar"></div>
</div>
`;
}
async update() {
await this.updateComplete;
console.log(this.el.foo); // --> <div ref="foo">
console.log(this.el.list.bar); // --> [ <div ref="bar">, <div ref="bar"> ]
// lazy querying - queries are not executed until these calls and results are cached
// you can also store custom values under this.el:
this.el.all = [this.el.foo, ...this.el.list.bar];
console.log(this.el.all); // --> [ <div ref="foo">, <div ref="bar">, <div ref="bar"> ]
// now we can easily iterate over all our elements:
console.log(this.el.all.map(el => el.getAttribute(`ref`))); // --> ["foo", "bar", "bar"]
}
}
It's also possible to "scope" and "select" for greater control over querying. This can be useful when your HTML is generated by some external means and you are unable to add ref attributes easily.
import ElRef from 'elref';
class MyElement extends LitElement {
constructor() {
super(...arguments);
this.el = new ElRef(this);
}
render() {
this.chart.render(); // chart rendering handled externally...
// Resulting HTML:
// <div class="chart-container">
// <svg>
// <g class="plot-area">...</g>
// <g class="axis x">...</g>
// <g class="axis y">...</g>
// </svg>
// </div>
}
async update() {
await this.updateComplete;
const svg = this.el.select(`.chart-container svg`).svg; // query for svg
this.el
.scope(svg) // from here on in the chain queries only operate within `svg`
.select(`g.plot-area`).update(`plotArea`) // query for plot area element
.list.select(`g.axis`).update(`axes`); // query for axis elements
console.log(this.el.plotArea); // --> <g class="plot-area">
console.log(this.el.axes); // --> [ <g class="axis x">, <g class="axis y"> ]
}
}
Usable as a mixin:
import ElRef from 'elref';
class MyElement extends ElRef.mixin()(LitElement) {
// no constructor override necessary
...
}
OR
import ElRef from 'elref';
import {mix} from 'mixwith';
class MyElement extends mix(LitElement).with(ElRef.mixin()) {
// no constructor override necessary
...
}
FAQs
Easy, lazy, cacheable sub-element querying for your custom elements
The npm package elref receives a total of 0 weekly downloads. As such, elref popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that elref demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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