Skip to content

caolan/pithy

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

14 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Pithy.js

An internal DSL for generating HTML in JavaScript.

Examples

Basic elements

html.div('#main', [
    html.h1(null, 'Hello, world!'),
    html.img({src: 'foo.jpg'})
]);
<div id="main">
    <h1>Hello, world!</h1>
    <img src="foo.jpg"/>
</div>

Loops etc.

Using Underscore.js or similar:

function todoItem(item) {
    return html.li({rel: item.id}, [
        html.div('.title', item.title),
        html.button('.destroy', 'delete')
    ]);
}

function todoList(list) {
    return html.ul('.todo-list', _.map(list, todoItem));
}

todoList([
    {id: 1, title: 'item one'},
    {id: 2, title: 'item two'},
    {id: 3, title: 'item three'}
]);
<ul class="todo-list">
    <li rel="1">
        <div class="title">item one</div>
        <button class="destroy">delete</button>
    </li>
    <li rel="2">
        <div class="title">item two</div>
        <button class="destroy">delete</button>
    </li>
    <li rel="3">
        <div class="title">item three</div>
        <button class="destroy">delete</button>
    </li>
</div>

Why use an internal DSL?

  • It's a more convenient and safer alternative to string contatenation
  • Very flexible, you can use all the power of JavaScript functions and control structures
  • For small bits of HTML you might not want to switch contexts from code to a template
  • Easier to debug than a templating engine
  • You get full tool-chain support:
    • editor support: syntax highlighting, code tools etc etc
    • code analyzers: jslint, jshint
    • testing/coverage tools

When to use?

  • Consider using where you might currently use string concatenation
  • Avoid using for large HTML documents or in places where speed is critical
  • Good for small snippets used for client-side page updates
  • Bad for generating huge amounts of HTML on the server

Usage

I like to alias the 'pithy' library as 'html':

var html = require('pithy');

You can then just use html.tagname as a function to create the appropriate element. Please note, you actually get a html.SafeString object back, not a native JavaScript String. This might mess up your isString() tests. If you have a workaround please send a pull-request.

There is also a html.escape() function for escaping HTML (returns a html.SafeString). It will not escape a value that is already a html.SafeString object.

About

An internal DSL for generating HTML in JavaScript

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published