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lit-element
Advanced tools
The lit-element package is a simple base class for creating fast, lightweight web components with the Lit library. It provides a declarative template system that ties your markup to your component's properties and state, along with reactive updates and a component lifecycle.
Declarative Templates
LitElement uses `html` tagged template literals to define templates that are bound to the component's properties. When properties change, the template is efficiently re-rendered.
import { LitElement, html } from 'lit-element';
class MyElement extends LitElement {
static get properties() {
return {
message: { type: String }
};
}
constructor() {
super();
this.message = 'Hello, World!';
}
render() {
return html`<p>${this.message}</p>`;
}
}
customElements.define('my-element', MyElement);
Reactive Properties
Properties can be made reactive using the `@property` decorator. When a reactive property changes, LitElement automatically updates the component's template.
import { LitElement, html, property } from 'lit-element';
class MyElement extends LitElement {
@property({ type: String }) greeting = 'Hello';
render() {
return html`<h1>${this.greeting}, World!</h1>`;
}
}
customElements.define('my-element', MyElement);
Lifecycle Methods
LitElement provides lifecycle methods such as `firstUpdated`, `updated`, and `disconnectedCallback` for managing the component's lifecycle events.
import { LitElement } from 'lit-element';
class MyElement extends LitElement {
firstUpdated(changedProperties) {
console.log('Component first updated!');
}
updated(changedProperties) {
console.log('Component updated with changed properties:', changedProperties);
}
disconnectedCallback() {
console.log('Component removed from the DOM!');
}
}
customElements.define('my-element', MyElement);
React is a popular library for building user interfaces. It uses a virtual DOM for efficient updates, which is different from LitElement's direct DOM manipulation. React components are typically more verbose and use JSX for templating.
Vue is a progressive framework for building UIs. Like LitElement, it offers a reactive and composable data model. Vue uses a virtual DOM similar to React and has a more opinionated structure, including a focus on single-file components.
Svelte is a compiler that generates efficient JavaScript code for creating web components. Unlike LitElement, which updates the DOM in response to property changes, Svelte compiles components to update the DOM directly, which can result in better performance for some applications.
Stencil is a compiler that generates web components with a focus on performance and compatibility. It provides a set of features similar to LitElement but includes a virtual DOM and TypeScript support out of the box.
LitElement is simple base class for creating fast, lightweight web components with lit-html.
LitElement is now part of the Lit library monorepo. Lit 2 includes lit-html 2.x and LitElement 3.x.
This repo contains the code for LitElement 2.x.
For LitElement 2.x documentation, see the legacy documentation site.
For Lit 2, the next version of LitElement and lit-html, see the Lit site.
LitElement uses lit-html to render into the
element's Shadow DOM
and adds API to help manage element properties and attributes. LitElement reacts to changes in properties
and renders declaratively using lit-html
. See the lit-html guide
for additional information on how to create templates for lit-element.
import {LitElement, html, css, customElement, property} from 'lit-element';
// This decorator defines the element.
@customElement('my-element')
export class MyElement extends LitElement {
// This decorator creates a property accessor that triggers rendering and
// an observed attribute.
@property()
mood = 'great';
static styles = css`
span {
color: green;
}`;
// Render element DOM by returning a `lit-html` template.
render() {
return html`Web Components are <span>${this.mood}</span>!`;
}
}
<my-element mood="awesome"></my-element>
Note, this example uses decorators to create properties. Decorators are a proposed standard currently available in TypeScript or Babel. LitElement also supports a vanilla JavaScript method of declaring reactive properties.
Runs in browsers with JavaScript Modules: Stackblitz, JSFiddle, JSBin, CodePen.
You can also copy this HTML file into a local file and run it in any browser that supports JavaScript Modules.
From inside your project folder, run:
$ npm install lit-element
To install the web components polyfills needed for older browsers:
$ npm i -D @webcomponents/webcomponentsjs
The last 2 versions of all modern browsers are supported, including Chrome, Safari, Opera, Firefox, Edge. In addition, Internet Explorer 11 is also supported.
Edge and Internet Explorer 11 require the web components polyfills.
Lit 2 (LitElement 3.0) has a few breaking changes and deprecations that have been back-ported to LitElement 2.5 in order to ease upgrading.
To prepare for Lit 2, update these APIs:
LitElement 2.4 | LitElement 2.5/Lit 2 |
---|---|
Decorator imports:import {customElement} from 'lit-element'; | import {customElement} from 'lit-element/decorators.js'; |
@internalProperty() foo; | @state() foo; |
Override _getUpdateComplete() | Override getUpdateComplete() |
Shadow root options: Override createRenderRoot() . | Add static shadowRootOptions . |
import {UpdatingElement} from 'lit-element'; | import {ReactiveElement} from 'lit-element'; |
Please see CONTRIBUTING.md.
FAQs
A simple base class for creating fast, lightweight web components
The npm package lit-element receives a total of 865,963 weekly downloads. As such, lit-element popularity was classified as popular.
We found that lit-element demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 13 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
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