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This is a community fork of GitHub's archived task_list
gem.
- [x] Get
- [x] More
- [ ] Done
- Get
- More
- Done
The Task List feature is made of several different components:
The backend components are designed for rendering the Task List item checkboxes, and the frontend components handle updating the Markdown source (embedded in the markup).
Rendering Task List item checkboxes from source Markdown depends on the TaskList::Filter
, designed to integrate with the html-pipeline
gem. For example:
require 'html/pipeline'
require 'task_list/filter'
pipeline = HTML::Pipeline.new [
HTML::Pipeline::MarkdownFilter,
TaskList::Filter
]
pipeline.call "- [ ] task list item"
Task List updates on the frontend require specific HTML markup structure, and must be enabled with JavaScript.
Rendered HTML (the <ul>
element below) should be contained in a js-task-list-container
container element and include a sibling textarea.js-task-list-field
element that is updated when checkboxes are changed.
- [ ] text
<div class="js-task-list-container">
<ul class="task-list">
<li class="task-list-item">
<input type="checkbox" class="js-task-list-item-checkbox" disabled />
text
</li>
</ul>
<form>
<textarea class="js-task-list-field">- [ ] text</textarea>
</form>
</div>
Enable Task List updates with:
// Vanilla JS API
var container = document.querySelector('.js-task-list-container')
new TaskList(container)
// or jQuery API
$('.js-task-list-container').taskList('enable')
NOTE: Updates are not persisted to the server automatically. Persistence is the responsibility of the integrating application, accomplished by hooking into the tasklist:change
JavaScript event. For instance, we use AJAX to submit a hidden form on update.
Read through the documented behaviors and samples in the source for more detail, including documented events.
Task Lists are packaged as both a RubyGem with both backend and frontend behavior, and a Bower package with just the frontend behavior.
For the backend Ruby components, add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'deckar01-task_list'
And then execute:
$ bundle
For the frontend components, add deckar01-task_list
to your npm dependencies config.
This is the preferred method for including the frontend assets in your application.
For the frontend components, add deckar01-task_list
to your Bower dependencies config.
# config/application.rb
require 'task_list/railtie'
Wherever you have your Sprockets setup:
Sprockets::Environment.new(Rails.root) do |env|
# Load TaskList assets
require 'task_list/railtie'
TaskList.asset_paths.each do |path|
env.append_path path
end
end
If you're not using Sprockets, you're on your own but it's pretty straight
forward. deckar01-task_list/railtie
defines TaskList.asset_paths
which you can use
to manage building your asset bundles.
At a high level, the Ruby components integrate with the html-pipeline
library. The frontend components are vanilla JavaScript and include a thin jQuery wrapper that supports the original plugin interface. The frontend components are written in CoffeeScript and need to be preprocessed for production use.
A polyfill for custom events must be included to support IE10 and below.
The markdown parser used on the front end produces false positives when looking for checkboxes
in some complex nesting situations. To combat this issue, you can enable the sourcepos
option
in your markdown parser. This will avoid parsing the markdown on the front end, because the line
numbers will be provided as attributes on the HTML elements. task_list
checks for the source
position attribute and falls back to manually parsing the markown when needed.
The event interface no longer passes data directly to the callbacks arguments
list. Instead the CustomEvent API is used, which adds data to the
event.detail
object.
// 1.x interface
el.on('tasklist:changed', function(event, index, checked) {
console.log(index, checked)
})
// 2.x interface
el.on('tasklist:changed', function(event) {
console.log(event.detail.index, event.detail.checked)
})
JavaScript unit tests can be run with script/testsuite
.
Ruby unit tests can be run with rake test
.
Functional tests are useful for manual testing in the browser. To run, install
the necessary components with script/bootstrap
then run the server:
rackup -p 4011
Navigate to http://localhost:4011/test/functional/test_task_lists_behavior.html
FAQs
Unknown package
We found that deckar01-task_list demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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