Uncle is a tiny (1.3k minzipped) virtual DOM library. Ya know React, right?
What's different:
- Should be easy to understand because of it's small code base
- HTML templates - no JSX
- Templates can be precompiled for production (easy, TBD)
Live Demo on JSFiddle
var TodoApp = {
items: [
{text: 'Buy milk', complete: false},
{text: 'Rob a bank', complete: true}
],
toggle: function(index) {
this.items[index].complete = !this.items[index].complete;
this.update();
},
// render each item in context of TodoApp
render: uncle.render('<ul class="todo">{{ this.items.map(TodoItem, this) }}</ul>'),
// mount our UL as a child of BODY
update: uncle.update(document.body)
};
var TodoItem = uncle.render(`<li class="todo-{{complete? 'complete' : 'active'}}" onclick="this.toggle($index)">{{text}}<li>`);
TodoApp.update();
Use double curly braces (mustaches) to embed Javascript one-liners.
<li class="todo-{{complete? 'complete' : 'active'}}">
Item #{{$index}}: {{text}}
<li>
Special attributes (or "directives"):
key="unique{{id}}"
- enables efficient reuse of DOM elements (as seen in React and other libraries)onclick="this.method(event, arg1)"
- DOM 1 event listeners wherethis
is your render context (not a DOM element)html="raw {{html}}"
- same asinnerHTML
Converts your template to a Javascript function, which renders virtual DOM.
var HelloMessage = {
name: "Mr. Spock",
render: uncle.render("<div>Hello {{ this.name }}</div>")
};
// HelloMessage.render() == {tag: "div", attrs:{}, children:[ "Hello ", HelloMessage.name ]}
Resulting function accepts two optional arguments: render(some_value, index)
.
This can be used with native Array methods like Array#map()
. In template's context both arguments are avaliable as $value
and $index
accordingly. If some_value
is an object, it's properties are made avaliable as regular variables for convenience.
Allows any "renderable" component to update the real DOM. When you call HelloMessage.update()
, it runs this.render()
, computes a diff between two virtual DOMs and patches the real one if needed.
HelloMessage.update = uncle.update(document.body);
HelloMessage.update();
// OR
var updateBody = uncle.update(document.body).bind(HelloMessage);
updateBody();
One can call update()
on-demand or put it in a RAF loop like this:
function updateDOM() {
HelloMessage.update();
window.requestAnimationFrame(updateDOM);
}
updateDOM();