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Version: v3

Components without a Framework

Integrating a component built with Rindo to a project without a JavaScript framework is straight forward. If you're using a simple HTML page, you can add your component via a script tag. For example, if we published a component to npm, we could load the component through a CDN like this:

<html>
<head>
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@familyjs/core/dist/family.js"></script>
</head>
<body>
<fml-toggle></fml-toggle>
</body>
</html>

Alternatively, if you wanted to take advantage of ES Modules, you could include the components using an import statement. Note that type="module" only works in modern browsers (not available in IE11 or Edge 12-18).

<html>
<head>
<script type="module">
import { defineCustomElements } from 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@familyjs/core/loader/index.es2017.mjs';
defineCustomElements();
</script>
</head>
<body>
<fml-toggle></fml-toggle>
</body>
</html>

Passing object props from a non-JSX element​

Setting the prop manually​

import { Prop } from '@rindo/core';

export class TodoList {
@Prop() myObject: object;
@Prop() myArray: Array<string>;
}
<todo-list></todo-list>
<script>
const todoListElement = document.querySelector('todo-list');
todoListElement.myObject = {};
todoListElement.myArray = [];
</script>

Watching props changes​

import { Prop, State, Watch } from '@rindo/core';

export class TodoList {
@Prop() myObject: string;
@Prop() myArray: string;
@State() myInnerObject: object;
@State() myInnerArray: Array<string>;

componentWillLoad() {
this.parseMyObjectProp(this.myObject);
this.parseMyArrayProp(this.myArray);
}

@Watch('myObject')
parseMyObjectProp(newValue: string) {
if (newValue) this.myInnerObject = JSON.parse(newValue);
}

@Watch('myArray')
parseMyArrayProp(newValue: string) {
if (newValue) this.myInnerArray = JSON.parse(newValue);
}
}
<todo-list my-object="{}" my-array="[]"></todo-list>