knockoff

0.1.3 • Public • Published

KnockOff

KnockoutJS to TAssembly compiler.

  • Compiles a basic subset of KnockoutJS functionality to TAssembly, a simple JSON-based intermediate template representation.
  • Builds a HTML5 DOM internally, ensures proper nesting.
  • TAssembly performs context-sensitive escaping of all user-provided data.
  • The overall solution is the fastest JS templating library in our micro-benchmarks, but yet provides the security benefits of much more expensive DOM templating libraries.

Usage

Simple example:

var ko = require('knockoff');
 
var template = ko.compile('<div data-bind="attr:{id:id}, text: body"></div>'),
    model = {
    id: "myId",
    body: "some text"
    };
 
console.log( template( model ) );

Compile to TAssembly for later execution:

var ko = require('knockoff');
 
var tassemblyTemplate = ko.compile(
    '<div data-bind="attr:{id:id}, text: body"></div>',
    { toTAssembly: true }
    );
// ["<div",["attr",{"id":"m.id"}],">",["text","m.body"],"</div>"]
console.log( JSON.stringify( tassemblyTemplate) );

Compile all the way to a function, and pass in TAssembly compilation options:

var ko = require('knockoff');
 
var options = {
    // Define globals accessible as $.* in any scope
    globals: {
        echo: function(x) {
            return x;
        }
    },
    // Define partial templates.
    // This one uses the global echo function defined above.
    partials: {
        userTpl: '<span data-bind="text: $.echo(name)"></span>'
    }
};
 
// Our simple template using KnockOut syntax, and referencing the partial
var templateString = '<div data-bind="template: { name: \'userTpl\', data: user }"></div>';
 
// Now compile the template & options into a function.
// Uses TAssembly internally, use toTAssembly option for TAssembly output.
var templateFn = ko.compile(templateString, options);
 
// A simple model object
var model = {
    user: { name: "Foo" }
};
 
// Now execute the template with the model.
// Prints: <div><span>Foo</span></div>
console.log( templateFn( model ) );

Partials are expected to be in KnockOff syntax, and will be compiled to TAssembly automatically.

KnockOff spec

KnockOff supports a subset of KnockOut functionality. The biggest differences are:

  • No reactivity. KnockOff aims for speed and one-shot operation.

  • Limited expression syntax. KnockOut supports arbitrary JS, while we restrict ourselves to literals (including objects), model access and function calls. The usual KnockOut model accessors are supported. In addition, a global $ object is defined, which can be populated with the globals compile time option.

text

Emit text content. HTML-sensitive chars are escaped. Options is a single expression:

<div data=bind="text: textContent"></div>

See also the KnockOut docs for text.

foreach

Iterate over an array. The view model '$data' in each iteration is each member of the array.

<ul data-bind="foreach: links">
    <li data-bind="text: $data"></li>
</ul>

If each array element is an object, its members will be directly accessible in the loop's view model:

<ul data-bind="foreach: people">
    <li><a data-bind="attr: { href: homepageURL }, text: name"></a></li>
</ul>

You can pass in the name of a partial instead of the inline template.

$index, $parent and other context properties work just like in KnockOut.

See also the KnockOut docs for foreach.

template

Calls a template (inline or name of a partial) with a given model.

<div data-bind="template: { name: 'person-template', data: buyer }"></div>

See also the KnockOut docs for template.

with

The with binding creates a new binding context, so that descendant elements are bound in the context of a specified object. It evaluates a nested block iff the model object is truish.

<div data-bind="with: person">
    <span data-bind="text: firstName"></span>
    <span data-bind="text: lastName"></span>
</div>

See also the KnockOut docs for with.

if

Evaluates a block or template if an expression is true.

<div data-bind="if: displayMessage">Here is a message. Astonishing.</div>

See also the KnockOut docs for if.

ifnot

Evaluates a block or template if an expression is false.

<div data-bind="ifnot: displayMessage">No message to display.</div>

See also the KnockOut docs for ifnot.

attr

Emit one or more HTML attributes. Automatic context-sensitive escaping is applied to href, src and style attributes.

<a data-bind="attr: { href: url, title: details }">
    Report
</a>

See also the KnockOut docs for attr.

visible

Hides a block using CSS if the condition is falsy.

<div data-bind="visible: shouldShowMessage">
    You will see this message only when "shouldShowMessage" holds a true value.
</div>

Currently this uses display: none !important; inline, but we could also add a class instead. Let us know which you prefer.

See also the KnockOut docs for visible.

Virtual elements / container-less syntax

You can use Knockout's comment syntax to apply control flow bindings (if, ifnot, foreach, with) to arbitrary content outside of elements:

<ul>
    <li>This item always appears</li>
    <!-- ko if: someExpressionGoesHere -->
        <li>I want to make this item present/absent dynamically</li>
    <!-- /ko -->
</ul>

See also the KnockOut docs for if and other control flow bindings.

Model access and expressions

KnockOff supports a restricted set of simple JS expressions. These are a subset of KnockOut's arbitrary JS. A KnockOff expression will normally also be a valid KnockOut expression.

  • Literals:
    • Number 2 or 3.4
    • Quoted string 'Some string literal'
    • Object {foo: 'bar', baz: someVar}
  • Variable access with dot notation: foo.bar
  • Array references: users[user]
  • Function calls: $.i18n('username', {foo: bar} ); nesting and multiple parameters supported

Expressions have access to a handful of variables defined in the current context:

  • $data - current view model
  • $root - root (topmost) view model
  • $parent - parent view model
  • $parents - array of parent view models
  • $parentContext - parent context object
  • $index - current iteration index in foreach
  • $ - globals defined at compile time; typically used for helper functions which should not be part of the model (i18n etc). This is an extension over KnockOut, which can be replicated there using expression rewriting.

/knockoff/

    Package Sidebar

    Install

    npm i knockoff

    Weekly Downloads

    10

    Version

    0.1.3

    License

    none

    Last publish

    Collaborators

    • gwicke