Note: This repository is not maintained anymore. You can still use it of course, or just use Bacon.js core which adds the asEventStream
method to jQuery objects, for accessing events as EventStream
objects.
A JQuery data binding library for Bacon.js.
Adds stuff to Bacon.$
. Is also called BJQ.
Includes
- Binding the state of HTML input elements to
Bacon.Model
objects that extend the Bacon.jsProperty
API by providing a bidirectional binding - AJAX helpers. Wrap a JQuery AJAX call into an EventStream using
Bacon.$.ajax("/get/stuff")
. Convert anEventStream
of requests into anEventStream
of responses likerequests.ajax()
. - FRP extensions to JQuery. Wrap JQuery events easily into an
EventStream
, as in$("body").clickE()
This library is intended as a replacement for Bacon.UI. It provides the same functionality, with the addition of two-way bound Models, model composition and lenses.
There are example applications in the examples directory, each with a README.md describing how they are started.
Each application does essentially the same thing and the code in the example applications is essentially just this:
// binding for "left" text field
left = bjq.textFieldValue($("#left"))
// binding for "right" text field
right = bjq.textFieldValue($("#right"))
// make a two-way binding between these two
// values in the two fields will now stay in sync
right.bind(left)
// Make a one-way side effect: update label text on changes, uppercase
right.map(".toUpperCase").changes().assign($("#output"), "text")
// Add an input stream for resetting the value
left.addSource($("#reset").asEventStream("click").map(""))
The bacon.jquery
API consists of methods for creating a Model
representing the
state of a DOM element or a group of DOM elements. This API is published
as Bacon.$
, and the same object is returned when using AMD or
CommonJS.
Creates a Model
for an
<input type="text">
element, given as a JQuery object. You can optionally supply an initial value.
Creates a Model
for a
<input type="checkbox">
element, given as a JQuery object. The value is true
if the checkbox is checked and
false
otherwise.
Creates a Model
for a <select>
element, given as a JQuery object. The value of the model corresponds to the value
attribute of the selected <option>
element.
Creates a Model
for a
group of <input type="radio">
elements, given as a JQuery object or an Array
of jQuery objects. The value of the model corresponds to the value
attribute
of the selected radio input element. Note that value
is a string.
Like Bacon.$.radioGroupValue
, but for integer values.
Creates a Model
for a group
of <input type="checkbox">
elements, given as a JQuery object or an Array of
jQuery objects. The value of the model is an array of the value
attributes of
the checked checkbox input elements. For instance, if you have checkboxes and 2
of these are checked, having values a
and b
, the value of the Model is
["a", "b"]
.
TODO: add HTML/JS examples
BJQ adds methods to JQuery, for wrapping events into an EventStream
.
For example, to wrap click events on <body>
into an EventStream
, you
can
var clicks = $("body").clickE()
Supported methods include the following:
- keydownE
- keyupE
- keypressE
- clickE
- dblclickE
- mousedownE
- mouseupE
- mouseenterE
- mouseleaveE
- mousemoveE
- mouseoutE
- mouseoverE
- dragstart
- drag
- dragenter
- dragleave
- dragover
- drop
- dragend
- resizeE
- scrollE
- selectE
- changeE
- submitE
- blurE
- focusE
- focusinE
- focusoutE
- loadE
- unloadE
BJQ adds methods to JQuery, for performing animations and wrapping the
result Promise
into an EventStream
. For example
var fadeOut = $("#thing").fadeOutE("fast")
Supported methods include the following:
- animateE
- showE
- hideE
- toggleE
- fadeInE
- fadeOutE
- fadeToE
- fadeToggleE
- slideDownE
- slideUpE
- slideToggleE
BJQ provides helpers for JQuery AJAX. All the methods return an
EventStream
of AJAX results. AJAX errors are mapped into Error
events in the stream.
Aborted requests are not sent into the error stream. If you want to have a
stream that observes whether an AJAX request is running, use Bacon.awaiting
.
For example:
var searchParams = Bacon.once({ url: '/search', data: { query: 'apple' } })
var ajaxRequest = searchParams.ajax()
var requestRunning = searchParams.awaiting(ajaxRequest)
requestRunning.assign($('#ajaxSpinner'), 'toggle')
Performs an AJAX request on each event of your stream, collating results in the result stream.
The source stream is expected to provide the parameters for the AJAX call.
var usernameRequest = username.map(function(un) { return { type: "get", url: "/usernameavailable/" + un } })
var usernameAvailable = usernameRequest.changes().ajax()
Performs an AJAX request and returns the results in an EventStream.
var results = Bacon.$.ajax("/get/results")
or
var results = Bacon.$.ajax({ url: "/get/results"})
Like above, but performs the AJAX call lazily, i.e. not before it has a subscriber.
Turns your Bacon Ajax stream back to $.Deferred. It's useful if you need to provide a solution for users who are not familiar with Bacon.
All the BJQ methods, such as textFieldValue
return a Model
object, which is a Bacon.js Property
, but extends that API by the following methods.
Model API reference migrated to bacon.model
TODO: more
The requirejs example-app uses RequireJS, like this:
require.config({
paths: {
"bacon.jquery": "../dist/bacon.jquery",
"bacon": "components/bacon/dist/Bacon",
"jquery": "components/jquery/jquery"
}})
require(["bacon.jquery", "jquery"], function(bjq, $) {
left = bjq.textFieldValue($("#left"))
right = bjq.textFieldValue($("#right"))
right.bind(left)
right.assign($("#output"), "text")
})
The prebuilt javascript file can be found in the dist
directory, or here.
The API can be accessed using Bacon.$
or like in the above example.
The plain example-app uses RequireJS, like this:
So feel free to use plain old <script>
tags to include Bacon, JQuery and BJQ.
The BJQ methods are exposed through Bacon.$
, so you can call them as in Bacon.$.textFieldValue(..)
.
The prebuilt javascript file can be found in the dist
directory, or here.
There's a plain example-app that uses script tags only.
BJQ is registered in the NPM repository as bacon.jquery
and works fine with node-browserify.
See the browserify example-app for an example.
Registered to the Bower registry as bacon.jquery
. See the
Example Applications, for instance requirejs example-app.
The bacon.jquery
module is built using NPM and Grunt.
To build, use npm install
.
Built javascript files are under the dist
directory.
Use the npm test
to run all tests.
Tests include mocha tests under the test
directory, and mocha browser tests under the browsertest
directory. The test script uses mocha-phantomjs to run the browser tests headless.
The browser tests can also be run by opening the
browsertest/runner.html
in the browser.
The tests are also run automatically on Travis CI. See build status below.
See Issues.
If this seems like a good idea, please tell me so! If you'd like to contribute, please do! Pull Requests, Issues etc appreciated. Star this project to let me know that you care.