🛠 Status: In Development
Corpuscule is currently under heavy development. Feedback is always welcome, but be careful with using it in production. API is not ready yet and can receive large changes.
Corpuscule is a set of libraries built on top of Web Components standard. It provides all necessary tools to built whole application from scratch including redux connector, router and form utils.
You can use almost all Corpuscule tools with any Web Component based system, like Polymer,
LitElement or SkateJS.
They are not bound to @corpuscule/element
and implemented with only web components lifecycle
hooks. Also, @corpuscule/element
can use any renderer you want: lit-html,
hyperHTML, preact or even
React.
Bundle size matters. It becomes critical for people with a slow internet connection. Corpuscule already uses Web Components standard that takes care of the component system, so everything it needs is to have as many useful features as possible in smallest size as possible.
Features adding to the JavaScript language simplify developer's life, give new opportunities and solve problems like security holes. That's why Corpuscule is trying to be on the bleeding edge of language development and use the latest features.
Semantics is a keystone of the web for a long time now. We used to make our markup as meaningful as
possible. We use <article>
instead of <div>
to wrap our articles because <article>
makes way
more sense than a simple <div>
. We have <header>
, <section>
and <footer>
tags to split our
layout to parts properly.
However, with the React popularity growing we have got not only great solutions but also a handful
of doubtful patterns. One of them is an approach to put logic into the markup. This approach brings
such components as <Provider>
, <Suspense>
, <Connect(MyComponent)>
etc. that can have no own
markup at all!
So while it is acceptable for React components since they exist only on the JS level, it could be wrong for web components which have their representation in the DOM. The existence of only logic components in DOM breaks the idea of semantics.
That's why Corpuscule suggests a slightly different approach. Since it is just logic, we can apply it to semantic web components using decorators and class properties. It means that single web component could be a component connected to Redux, custom context provider and router outlet at the same time.
Some technological solutions of Corpuscule could be surprising and confusing. This section provides explanation of why this or that solution has been chosen.
The new decorators specification could become a game-changer in the JavaScript world (along with private class fields/methods ). Decorators add a powerful system of metaprogramming to the JS language allowing to step into all stages of the class lifecycle, to manipulate class fields in the very declarative yet incredibly flexible way. You still could achieve some similar results using class mixins and static methods with property definition, but it is way less descriptive and has its drawbacks.
Unfortunately, the initial proposal Corpuscule was built on is deprecated due to serious performance issues. There is a new static decorator proposal, but it does not have Babel implementation yet, and it is not defined when it will.
That is the reason Corpuscule moves to an emulation of static decorator proposal. What does emulation mean? Well, it is not a specification-correct implementation, but it implements basic ideas of the proposal. Emulation uses the legacy decorator proposal (stage 1) that is well-supported by Babel and Typescript supplemented with a custom solution: a Babel plugin that adds missing parts to the code generated by the legacy plugin.
This solution of Corpuscule may confuse you. You may rarely meet using the regular string-named
class fields in Corpuscule tools. Why? Well, the best answer is to avoid naming conflicts. Web
components are not React. They won't pack component properties into a separate object this.props
.
All properties come as class fields. So, to avoid a situation when you want to use property
render
, but you have a render
method that is a heart of your component system, Corpuscule
declares all its field names as Symbols. So you are free to use render
property along with
[render]
method, and you are free to create another Symbol named render
and use it in the same
class. Symbols are unique, and that is their power.
To work with the Corpuscule project, you have to transpile it using Babel because decorators are not a part of the language yet.
Along with the Babel you have to install @corpuscule/babel-preset
that should be used in Babel configuration. This preset contains everything to compile decorators in
a way Corpuscule need to work.
API documentation is available here.
Corpuscule consists of following tools:
router
or redux
.@corpuscule/element
.
Also includes solution for using custom element class definition as a source for custom element name
(MyElement
-> my-element
) that makes lit-html
usage similar to React. react-redux
for Corpuscule.When the static decorator specification reaches stage 3, Corpuscule will be rewritten using it. The current implementation of Corpuscule is done with the basic ideas of the new proposal in mind (that is why it does not use some obvious ideas like a function that creates decorators). It should reduce the number of efforts production code refactoring will take when decorators become a standard.
Generated using TypeDoc