A library for imitating operating system graphical user interfaces on the web
Specifically, Windows 98 — for now at least; it could be expanded in the future.
This library powers 98.js.org, a web-based version of Windows 98, including Paint, Notepad, Sound Recorder, and more.
See the demos for more information.
Features
-
Menu bars, with support for checkbox items, disabled states, and submenus
-
App windows which you can drag around, maximize, minimize, close, and resize
-
Dialog and tool window variants
-
Flying titlebar animation that guides your eyes, for maximize/minimize/restore
-
Focus containment: if you Tab or Shift+Tab within a window, it wraps around to the first/last control.
-
Button styles, including lightweight buttons, disabled buttons, and default action buttons
-
Scrollbar styles, webkit-specific (in the future there could be a custom scrollbar based on a nonintrusive scrollbar library, or styles supporting a library, where you're expected to use the library directly)
- Procedurally rendered arrows, allowing for different scrollbar sizes
- Inversion effect when clicking on scrollbar track
-
Themeable with Windows .theme
& .themepack
files at runtime!
Demo
See a demo online here
See also
Requirements
This library currently requires jQuery for the windowing implementation.
Menu bars do not require jQuery.
(Eventually I want to have no dependencies. So far I've removed jQuery from the menu code...)
Setup
The library is not yet provided as a bundle (single file).
You can either 1. download the repository as a ZIP file, 2. clone the repository, or 3. install the library as an npm package.
You have to include scripts for the components you want to use (MenuBar.js
or $Window.js
),
along with stylesheets for layout, a theme, and a color scheme.
Make sure to use the compiled CSS files, not the source files.
In <head>
:
<link href="os-gui/layout.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css">
<link href="os-gui/windows-98.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css">
<link href="os-gui/windows-default.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css">
In <head>
or <body>
:
<script src="os-gui/MenuBar.js"></script>
<script src="lib/jquery.js"></script>
<script src="os-gui/$Window.js"></script>
API
Note: The API will likely change a lot, but I maintain a Changelog.
Panel & Inset Styles
.inset-deep
creates a 2px inset border.outset-deep
creates a 2px inset border (like a button or window or menu popup).inset-shallow
creates a 1px inset border.outset-shallow
creates a 1px outset border
Button styles
Button styles are applied to button
elements globally.
(And if you ever want to reset it, note that you have to get rid of the pseudo element ::after
as well. @TODO: scope CSS)
Toggle Buttons
To make a toggle button, add the .toggle
class to the button.
Make it show as pressed with the .selected
class. (@TODO: rename this .pressed
)
You should use the styles together with semantic aria-pressed
, aria-haspopup
, and/or aria-expanded
attributes as appropriate.
Default Buttons
You can show button is the default action by adding .default
to the button.
Note that in Windows 98, this style moves from button to button depending on the focus.
A rule of thumb is that it should be on the button that will trigger with Enter.
Lightweight Buttons
You can make a lightweight button by adding .lightweight
to the button.
Lightweight buttons are subtle and have no border until hover.
Disabled Buttons
You can disable a button by adding the standard disabled
attribute to the button.
Scrollbar styles
Scrollbar styles are applied globally, but they have a -webkit-
prefix, so they'll only work in "webkit-based" browsers, generally, like Chrome, Safari, and Opera.
(Can be overridden with ::-webkit-scrollbar
and related selectors (but not easily reset to the browser default, unless -webkit-appearance: scrollbar
works... @TODO: scope CSS)
Selection styles
Selection styles are applied globally.
(Can be overridden with ::selection
(but not easily reset to the browser default... unless with unset
? @TODO: scope CSS)
Creates a menu bar component.
menus
should be an object holding arrays of menu item specifications, keyed by menu button name.
Returns an object with property element
, which you should then append to the DOM where you want it.
See examples in the demo code.
Event: info
Can be used to implement a status bar.
A description is provided as event.detail.description
when rolling over menu items that specify a description
. For example:
menubar.element.addEventListener("info", (event)=> {
statusBar.textContent = event.detail?.description || "";
});
Event: default-info
Signals that a status bar should be reset to blank or a default message.
menubar.element.addEventListener("default-info", (event)=> {
statusBar.textContent = "";
statusBar.textContent = "For Help, click Help Topics on the Help Menu.";
statusBar.textContent = "For Help, press F1.";
statusBar.innerHTML = "For Help, <a href='docs'>click here</a>";
});
Menu item specifications are either MENU_DIVIDER
- a constant indicating a horizontal rule, or an object with the following properties:
item
: a label for the itemshortcut
(optional): a keyboard shortcut for the item, like "Ctrl+A"; this is not functionally implemented, you'll need to listen for the shortcut yourself!action
(optional): a function to execute when the item is clicked (can only specify either action
or checkbox
)checkbox
(optional): an object specifying that this item should behave as a checkbox.
Property check
of this object should be a function that checks if the checkbox should be checked or not and returns true
for checked and false
for unchecked. What a cutesy name.
Property toggle
should be a function that toggles the state of the option, however you're storing it; called when clicked.enabled
(optional): can be false
to unconditionally disable the item, or a function that determines whether the item should be enabled, returning true
to enable the item, false
to disable.submenu
(optional): an array of menu item specifications to create a submenudescription
: for implementing a status bar; an info
event is emitted when rolling over the item with this description
Menus can be navigated using the first letter of the menu item, or if you place &
in front of a letter in the menu item, it will be used as the hotkey.
For menu button hotkeys, you need to press Alt, and within menu popups you must press the key directly. Alt will close the menus.
If there are multiple menu items with the same hotkey, it will cycle between them without activating them.
You should try to make the hotkeys unique, including between hotkeys and first letters of menu items without defined hotkeys.
(This behavior is observed in Windows 98's Explorer's Favorites menu, where you can make bookmarks that match other accelerators or menu items.)
$Window(options)
Creates a window component that can be dragged around and such, brought to the front when clicked*
options.title
: Shortcut to set the window title initially.
options.icon
: Sets the icon of the window, assuming a global TITLEBAR_ICON_SIZE
(which should generally be 16) and a global $Icon
function which takes an icon identifier and size and returns an img
(or other image-like element). I know this API sucks, I'm going to change it, don't worry. See Specifying Icons for more details.
options.toolWindow
: If true
, the window will be a tool window, which means it will not have a minimize or maximize button, and it will be shown as always focused by default. It will also have a smaller close button in the default styles.
options.parentWindow
: If specified, the window will be a child of this window. For tool windows, the focus state will be shared with the parent window.
options.maximizeButton
: If set to false
, the window will not have a maximize button. You cannot enable this if toolWindow
is true
.
options.minimizeButton
: If set to false
, the window will not have a minimize button. You cannot enable this if toolWindow
is true
.
options.closeButton
: If set to false
, the window will not have a close button.
options.resizable
: If set to true
, the window can be resized by the edges and corners.
options.outerWidth
: Specifies the initial width of the window, including borders.
options.outerHeight
: Specifies the initial height of the window, including title bar, menu bar, and borders.
options.innerWidth
: Specifies the initial width of the window contents, excluding borders.
options.innerHeight
: Specifies the initial height of the window contents, excluding title bar, menu bar, and borders
options.minOuterWidth
: The minimum outer width of the window (when resizing), in pixels.
options.minOuterHeight
: The minimum outer height of the window (when resizing), in pixels.
options.minInnerWidth
: The minimum width of the window contents (when resizing), in pixels.
options.minInnerHeight
: The minimum height of the window contents (when resizing), in pixels.
options.constrainRect(rect, x_axis, y_axis)
: A function that can be used to constrain the window to a particular rectangle. Takes and returns a rectangle object with x
, y
, width
, and height
properties. x_axis
and y_axis
define what is being dragged -1
for left and top, 1
for right and bottom, and 0
for middle. Note that the window will always be constrained to not move past the minimum width and height.
*Iframes require special handling. There's an $IframeWindow
helper in 98, but a better approach would use composition rather than inheritance.
(You could want multiple iframes in a window, or just an iframe with other content around it, maybe an iframe that sometimes exists or not!)
Returns a jQuery object with additional methods and properties:
title(text)
Sets the title, or if text
isn't passed, returns the current title of the window.
close()
Closes the window.
focus()
Tries to focus something within the window, in this order of priority:
- The last focused control within the window
- A control with
class="default"
- If it's a tool window, the parent window
- and otherwise the window itself (specifically
$window.$content
)
blur()
Removes focus from the window. If focus is outside the window, it is left unchanged.
center()
Centers the window in the page.
You should call this after the contents of the window is fully rendered, or you've set a fixed size for the window.
If you have images in the window, wait for them to load before showing and centering the window, or define a fixed size for the images.
applyBounds()
Fits the window within the page if it's partially offscreen.
(Doesn't resize the window if it's too large; it'll go off the right and bottom of the screen.)
bringTitleBarInBounds()
Repositions the window so that the title bar is within the bounds of the page, so it can be dragged.
bringToFront()
Brings the window to the front by setting its z-index
to larger than any z-index
yet used by the windowing system.
setDimensions({ innerWidth, innerHeight, outerWidth, outerHeight })
Sets the size of the window. Pass { innerWidth, innerHeight }
to specify the size in terms of the window content, or { outerWidth, outerHeight }
to specify the size including the window frame.
(This may be expanded in the future to allow setting the position as well...)
$Button(text, action)
Creates a button in the window's content area.
It automatically closes the window when clicked. There's no (good) way to prevent this, as it's intended only for dialogs.
If you need any other behavior, just create a <button>
and add it to the window's content area.
Returns a jQuery object.
$content
jQuery object.
Where you can append contents to the window.
$titlebar
jQuery object.
The titlebar of the window, including the title, window buttons, and possibly an icon.
$title
jQuery object.
The title portion of the titlebar.
$x
jQuery object.
The close button.
Event: closed
Whether the window has been closed.
Event: close
Can be used to prevent closing a window, with event.preventDefault()
.
Since there could be multiple listeners, and another listener could prevent closing, if you want to detect when the window is actually closed, use the closed
event.
Event: closed
This event is emitted when the window is closed. It cannot be prevented.
Event: window-drag-start
Can be used to prevent dragging a window, with event.preventDefault()
.
Specifying Icons
⚠️ Bad API! Pointlessly indirect! ⚠️
var TITLEBAR_ICON_SIZE = 16;
function getIconPath(name, size){
return "/images/icons/" + name + "-" + size + "x" + size + ".png";
}
function $Icon(name, size){
var $img = $("<img class='icon'/>");
$img.attr({
draggable: false,
src: getIconPath(name, size),
width: size,
height: size,
});
return $img;
}
$window = new $Window({
icon: "my-icon",
});
License
Licensed under the MIT License, see LICENSE for details.
Development
Install Node.js if you don't already have it.
Clone the repository, then in the project directory run npm i
to install the dependencies.
Also run npm i
when pulling in changes from the repository, in case there are changes to the dependencies.
Run npm start
to open a development server. It will open a demo page in your default browser. Changes to the library will be automatically recompiled, and the page will automatically reload.
It's a good idea to close the server when updating or installing dependencies; otherwise you may run into EPERM issues.
The styles are written with PostCSS, for mixins and other transforms.
Recommended: install a PostCSS language plugin for your editor, like PostCSS Language Support for VS Code.
Currently there's some CSS that has to manually be regenerated in-browser and copied into theme-specific CSS files.
In the future this could be done with a custom PostCSS syntax parser for .theme/.themepack files, and maybe SVG instead of any raster graphics to avoid needing node-canvas
(native dependencies are a pain). Or maybe UPNG.js and plain pixel manipulation.