BOB is a simple and powerful javascript pipe system for building complex XML and HTML structures.
Download the repo, or copy the small (<8 KB) public/BOB.standalone.min.js
. It is completely standalone: no external libraries are needed.
Then in your html's header tag
<script src="/BOB.standalone.min.js"></script>
npm install bob-xml
Deprecated, but should still work
bower install BOB
BOB is a pipe system for generating XML and HTML structures.
new BOB("div").toString() //=> "<div></div>"
new BOB("div").s() //=> "<div></div>"
new BOB("div").class("some_class").s() //=> "<div class=\"some_class\"></div>"
new BOB("div").id("some_id").s() //=> "<div id=\"some_id\"></div>"
new BOB("div.some_class").s() //=> "<div class=\"some_class\"></div>"
new BOB("div#some_id").s() //=> "<div id=\"some_id\"></div>"
new BOB("div").style("min-height: 10px;").s() //=> "<div style=\"min-height: 10px;\"></div>"
new BOB("h1").content("BOB is awesome! <3").s() //=> "<h1>BOB is awesome! <3</h1>"
new BOB("div", {"data-BOB-is-cool": "Yes it is", "data-very-cool": "indeed"}).s() //=> "<div data-BOB-is-cool="Yes it is" data-very-cool="indeed"></div>"
new BOB("div").append("span").s() //=> "<div></div><span></span>"
new BOB("div").prepend("span").s() //=> "<span></span><div></div>"
new BOB("div").insert("span").s() //=> "<div><span></span></div>"
new BOB("div").append("span").id("some_id").s() //=> "<div></div><span id=\"some_id\"></span>"
new BOB("div").append("span").up().id("some_id").s() //=> "<div id=\"some_id\"></div><span></span>"
new BOB("ul").do([1,2,3]).insert("li").content(BOB.data).s() //=> <ul><li>1</li><li>2</li><li>3</li></ul>
data = [1,2,3]; new BOB("ul").do(data).insert("li", {"data-property": BOB.data}).id(BOB.data).s() //=> <ul><li id="1" data-property="1"></li><li id="2" data-property="2"></li><li id="3" data-property="3"></li></ul>
new BOB("ul").do([1,2,3]).insert("li").up().id(BOB.data).s() //INVALID //=> The BOB.data will not be set and you will get the output of: "<ul><li></li><li></li><li></li></ul>".
new BOB("ul").do([1,2,3]).insert("li").content(function(){return BOB.data() + 2}).s() //=> <ul><li>3</li><li>4</li><li>5</li></ul>
data_modifier = function(){return BOB.data() + 2}; new BOB("ul").do([1,2,3]).insert("li").content(data_modifier).s() //=> <ul><li>3</li><li>4</li><li>5</li></ul>
//Shorthand syntax:
new BOB("div").i("img", {"src":"some.png"}).u().d([1,2,3]).i("p.number").co(BOB.d).s() //=> "<div><img src="some.png" /><p class="number">1</p><p class="number">2</p><p class="number">3</p></div>"
Go to shorthand syntax section
new BOB("div").toString()
//=> "<div></div>"
You can also use the shorthand method "s". For a full list see the shorthand section
new BOB("div").s()
//=> "<div></div>"
new BOB("div").class("some_class").s()
//=> "<div class=\"some_class\"></div>"
new BOB("div").id("some_id").s()
//=> "<div id=\"some_id\"></div>"
This can also be done with the shorthand selector style:
new BOB("div.some_class").s()
//=> "<div class=\"some_class\"></div>"
new BOB("div#some_id").s()
//=> "<div id=\"some_id\"></div>"
new BOB("div").style("min-height: 10px;").s()
//=> "<div style=\"min-height: 10px;\"></div>"
new BOB("h1").content("BOB is awesome! <3").s()
//=> "<h1>BOB is awesome! <3</h1>"
new BOB("div", {"data-BOB-is-cool": "Yes it is", "data-very-cool": "indeed"}).s()
//=> "<div data-BOB-is-cool="Yes it is" data-very-cool="indeed"></div>"
new BOB("div").append("span").s()
//=> "<div></div><span></span>"
new BOB("div").prepend("span").s()
//=> "<span></span><div></div>"
new BOB("div").insert("span").s()
//=> "<div><span></span></div>"
When appending, prepending, or inserting you will effectively branch downwards, meaning that the latest element is your current active. Example:
new BOB("div").append("span").id("some_id").s()
//=> "<div></div><span id=\"some_id\"></span>"
In this simple example we see that it is the span
that receives the id
, not the div. If we wanted to affect the div
instead (in this trivial, nonsensical, example), we would do:
new BOB("div").append("span").up().id("some_id").s()
//=> "<div id=\"some_id\"></div><span></span>"
We effectively traversed backwards - or up - the stack. These are the basics of managing nesting and branching. Let's have a look at how to build useful branches.
It is very important to keep track of what is "in focus" when you are applying the next pipe.
Say you want XML/HTML that looks like this:
<ul><li>1</li><li>2</li><li>3</li></ul>
To do such branching, without having to re-write all parts manually, you can use the do
method:
new BOB("ul").do([1,2,3]).insert("li").content(BOB.data).s()
//=> <ul><li>1</li><li>2</li><li>3</li></ul>
Here you see BOB.data
which is a special variable which represents the individual data points when the chain in being executed. It can be used for anything within the scope of the do
, eg.
let data = [1,2,3]
new BOB("ul").do(data).insert("li", {"data-property": BOB.data}).id(BOB.data).s()
//=> <ul><li id="1" data-property="1"></li><li id="2" data-property="2"></li><li id="3" data-property="3"></li></ul>
However, if you use the up
command and go out of the scope of do
, BOB.data
might not work. The behaviour is undefined so errors and/or strange behaviour might occur. Eg:
new BOB("ul").do([1,2,3]).insert("li").up().id(BOB.data).s() //INVALID
//=> The BOB.data will not be set and you will get the output of: "<ul><li></li><li></li><li></li></ul>".
BOB.data is a function, so you cannot manipulate BOB.data
directly.
It is advised to do the data manipulation prior to the do
pipe. However, it is possible to manipulate BOB.data inline like this:
new BOB("ul").do([1,2,3]).insert("li").content(function(){return BOB.data() + 2}).s()
//=> <ul><li>3</li><li>4</li><li>5</li></ul>
//Or you can predefine a set of manipulations
data_modifier = function(){return BOB.data() + 2}
new BOB("ul").do([1,2,3]).insert("li").content(data_modifier).s()
//=> <ul><li>3</li><li>4</li><li>5</li></ul>
It is possible to get a pretty printed version of the XML/HTML, with the .prettyPrint()
method, or the .pp
shorthand.
new BOB("article").a("lol").i("photo").co("test").a("test2").i("price").co("200euro").pp()
#=> "</article>\n<lol>\n\t<photo>\n\t\ttest\n\t</photo>\n\t<test2>\n\t\t<price>\n\t\t\t200euro\n\t\t</price>\n\t</test2>\n</lol>"
This string will print as the following:
</article>
<lol>
<photo>
test
</photo>
<test2>
<price>
200euro
</price>
</test2>
</lol>
Writing out these pipes can be tiresome if you are building big and complex structures, so you can utilize these shorthand methods.
Long Version | Short Version |
---|---|
.insert | .i |
.append | .a |
.prepend | .p |
.content | .co |
.style | .st |
.class | .cl |
.id | .id |
.style | .st |
.toString | .s |
.do | .d |
.up | .u |
BOB.data | BOB.d |
.prettyPrint | .pp |
Now you can get tight and cozy syntax like this:
new BOB("div").i("img", {"src":"some.png"}).u().d([1,2,3]).i("p.number").co(BOB.d).s()
//=> "<div><img src="some.png"></img><p class="number">1</p><p class="number">2</p><p class="number">3</p></div>"
Better examples coming
let data = ["Team member1", "team member2", "team member3"]
new BOB("ul").do(data).insert("li.team").content(BOB.data).s()
//=> "<ul><li class="team">Team member1</li><li class="team">team member2</li><li class="team">team member3</li></ul>"
new BOB("div#wrapper").insert("div#searchbar").up().insert("footer").do(["team","contact","buy"]).insert("h2").content(BOB.data).s()
//=> "<div id="wrapper"><div id="searchbar"></div><footer><h2>team</h2><h2>contact</h2><h2>buy</h2></footer></div>"
new BOB("div#wrapper").insert("div#searchbar").up().insert("footer").do(["team","contact","buy"]).insert("h2",{"onclick": function(){return ("alert('" + BOB.data() + "');") }}).content(BOB.data).s()
//=> "<div id="wrapper"><div id="searchbar"></div><footer><h2 onclick="alert('team');">team</h2><h2 onclick="alert('contact');">contact</h2><h2 onclick="alert('buy');">buy</h2></footer></div>"
new BOB("div#wrapper").insert("div#searchbar").up().insert("footer").do(["team","contact","buy"]).insert("h2",{"onclick": function(){return ("alert('" + BOB.data() + "');") }}).content(BOB.data).up().up().prepend("a",{"href": "http://www.google.com"}).content("google").s()
//=> "<a href="http://www.google.com">google</a><div id="wrapper"><div id="searchbar"></div><footer><h2 onclick="alert('team');">team</h2><h2 onclick="alert('contact');">contact</h2><h2 onclick="alert('buy');">buy</h2></footer></div>"
TODO: get simple and complex examples comparing BOB, d3 and jQuery. And, also, pure JS, maybe.
Currently, BOB has no unit tests, so it cannot be considered production ready.
Please help contribute to this project. It is brand new, and there are probably loads of features that can be added.
Please note: This library is not in active development
- Adding element selector which finds elements in the active DOM.
- Adding ability to output string into existing elements (similar how jQuery does it)
- Adding nested data-aquisition data, eg:
new BOB("div").do(["a", "b"]).do([1,2]).in("a").class(BOB.data[0]).co(BOB.data[1]) //=> <div><a class="a">1</a><a class="a">2</a><a class="b">1</a><a class="b">2</a></div>
- Automatically detect if option value is a function. If so, create a callback for it. Eg: new BOB("a", {"onclick": function(){alert "some shit"}}).co("call me") //=> call me (this can be problematic with BOB.data. Solution: pass BOB.data into the callback.) => {"onclick": function(data){alert(data+1)}} => <a onclick="BOB.callbacks[N]('parsed BOB.data');". The same approach can be used other places as well.
MIT