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jsor

v1.0.16

Published

jsor is a fast and very small JavaScript library with only 2.0 KB

Downloads

13

Readme

jsor

jsor is a fast and very small JavaScript library with only 2.0 KB.

It helps convert javascript objects into HTML documents, this makes the code cleaner, clearer and more readable, the programming is simpler, easier and more reusable, it is compatible with most browsers since it uses native javascript.

If you are new to jsor, we recommend that you take a look at the information below.

Browser

Script tag

<script src="https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/dist/jsor.min.js"></script>

Node

To include jsor in Node, first install with npm.

$ npm install jsor

Example

import JSOR from 'jsor';
 
console.log(
    JSOR.render({tag: 'div', id:1, className: 'my-class', childNodes: [
      {tag: 'p', innerHTML:'First element'},
      {tag: 'p', innerHTML:'Second element'}
    ]})
);

/* logs:
<div id="1" class="my-class">
  <p>First element</p>
  <p>Second element</p>
</div>
*/

Example backend data

import JSOR from 'jsor';

//data from the backend
var data = '{"tag":"div","className":"my-class","id":"1","childNodes":[{"tag":"p","innerHTML":"First element"},{"tag":"p","innerHTML":"Second element"}]}';

console.log(
    JSOR.render(JSON.parse(data))
);

/* logs:
<div class="my-class" id="1">
  <p>First element</p>
  <p>Second element</p>
</div>
*/

Example each data

import JSOR from 'jsor';

var data = [{name: 'First element'}, {name: 'Second element'}]
 
console.log(
    JSOR.render({tag: 'div', className: 'container', childNodes: data.map(function (e) {
      return {tag:'p', innerHTML:e.name};
    })})
);

/* logs:
<div class="container">
  <p>First element</p>
  <p>Second element</p>
</div>
*/

Simple example, hidden element

import JSOR from 'jsor';

let enabled = false;

console.log(
    JSOR.render({tag: 'div', id:1, className: 'my-class', childNodes: [
      !enabled || {tag: 'p', innerHTML:'First element'},
      {tag: 'p', innerHTML:'Second element', style:{display:enabled || 'none'}},
      {tag: 'p', innerHTML:'Third element', className:enabled || 'hidde'}
    ]})
);

/* logs:
<div id="1" class="my-class">
  <p style="display: none;">Second element</p>
  <p class="hidde">Third element</p>
</div>
*/

Separate by components

const FirstElement = (props) => {
  return {tag: 'div', onClick: props.handleChange, childNodes: [
    {tag: 'h1', innerHTML: 'First element'}
  ]};
};

const SecondElement = (props) => {
  return {tag: 'div', onClick: props.handleChange, childNodes: [
    {tag: 'h1', innerHTML: 'Second element'}
  ]};
};

class Parent {
  constructor(props) {
    this.props = props;
  }
  handleChange(event) {
    console.log(event.target.innerHTML);
  }
  render() {
    return {tag: 'div', className: 'btn', style: {color: '#999'}, id: 'parent', childNodes: [
      {tag: FirstElement, handleChange: this.handleChange},
      {tag: SecondElement, handleChange: this.handleChange},
      this.props.childNodes
    ]};
  }
}

console.log(
  JSOR.render({tag: Parent, hide: true, childNodes: [
    {tag: 'div', childNodes: [
      {tag: 'h1', innerHTML: 'Third element'}
    ]}
  ]})
);

/* logs:
<div class="btn" id="parent" style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">
  <div><h1>First element</h1></div>
  <div><h1>Second element</h1></div>
  <div><div><h1>Third element</h1></div></div>
</div>
*/

Extend Components

class Parent extends JSOR.Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);
    this.state = {
        running:true
    };
    this.handleChangeStop = this.handleChangeStop.bind(this);
  }
  handleChangeStop() {
    this.setState({
        running:false
    })
  }
  render() {
    return {tag: 'div', childNodes: [
      {tag: 'span', handleChangeStop: this.handleChangeStop, innerHTML:'[Stop]'},
      {tag: 'div', innerHTML: this.state.running ? 'Loading...' : ''}
    ]};
  }
}

console.log(
  JSOR.render({tag: Parent})
);

/* logs:
<div>
  <span>[Stop]</div>
  <div>Loading...</div>
</div>
*/