- Framework-independent standalone HTML serializer for generating markup for Web Components.
- Expand any HTML element (including custom elements and web components) to HTML with defined conventions from web standards.
- This means that Web Components created with WebC are compatible with server-side rendering (without duplicating author-written markup).
- Compilation tools to aggregate component-level assets (CSS or JS) for critical CSS or client JavaScript.
- Opt-in to scope your component CSS using WebC’s built-in CSS prefixer.
- Or, use browser-native Shadow DOM style scoping (for future-compatibility when Declarative Shadow DOM browser support is ubiquitous)
- Progressive-enhancement friendly.
- Streaming friendly.
- Shadow DOM friendly.
- Async friendly.
@11ty/eleventy-plugin-webc
adds WebC to Eleventyexpress-webc
by @NickColley adds WebC to Expresskoa-webc
by @sombriks adds WebC to Koa
“javascript frameworks are dead to me”—Andy Bell
“The DX and authoring model you landed on here looks fantastic”—Addy Osmani
“Really like the programmatic API approach over using a bundler to pre-compile and then serve.”—Harminder Virk
Folks doing similar things with Web Components: check them out!
Note: if you’re not building a plugin or integration for WebC, you can probably skip this section!
It’s available on npm as @11ty/webc
:
npm install @11ty/webc
This is an ESM project and as such requires a "type": "module"
in your package.json
(or use the .mjs
file extension).
import { WebC } from "@11ty/webc";
You can use this in a CommonJS file via dynamic import:
(async function() {
const { WebC } = await import("@11ty/webc");
})();
import { WebC } from "@11ty/webc";
let page = new WebC();
// This enables aggregation of CSS and JS
// As of 0.4.0 this is disabled by default
page.setBundlerMode(true);
// File
page.setInputPath("page.webc");
// Or, a String
// page.setContent(`<p>Hello!</p>`);
let { html, css, js, components } = await page.compile();
// Or, Readable Streams for each
let { html, css, js } = await page.stream();
If WebC looks familiar, that’s because WebC is HTML. These are single file HTML components but don’t require any special element conventions (for example Vue’s single file component uses a top-level <template>
for markup). Using <template>
in a WebC file will output 👀 a <template>
element.
<!doctype html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>WebC Example</title>
</head>
<body>
WebC *is* HTML.
</body>
</html>
- Uses
parse5
to parse WebC HTML as modern browsers do (credit to @DasSurma’s work with Vite here) <!doctype html>
is optional (will be added automatically if the content starts with<html
).- Throws a helpful error if it encounters quirks mode markup.
To use components, we provide a few options: registering them globally via JavaScript or dynamically declaratively importing directly in your WebC file via webc:import
.
import { WebC } from "@11ty/webc";
let page = new WebC();
// Pass in a glob, using the file name as component name
page.defineComponents("components/**.webc");
// Array of file names, using file name as component name
page.defineComponents(["components/my-component.webc"]);
// Object maps component name to file name
page.defineComponents({
"my-component": "components/my-component.webc"
});
And now you can use them in your WebC files without importing!
Consider this page.webc
file:
<!doctype html>
<title>WebC Example</title>
<my-component></my-component>
When compiled, this will expand <my-component>
to include the contents inside of components/my-component.webc
.
If the components/my-component.webc
file contains:
Components don’t need a root element, y’all.
Compiling page.webc
will return the following HTML:
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<title>WebC Example</title>
</head>
<body>
Components don’t need a root element, y’all.
</body>
</html>
Tricky trick: you aren’t limited to custom element names (e.g. my-component
) here. You can use p
, blockquote
, h1
, or any tag name to remap any HTML element globally. A more useful example might be an img
component that uses the Eleventy Image utility to optimize all images in your project.
See webc:import
on the WebC Reference
See webc:is
on the WebC Reference
See webc:keep
on the WebC Reference
See Slots on the WebC Reference
Enabling Bundler Mode (page.setBundlerMode(true)
) aggregates CSS and JS found in WebC components. Bundler mode is disabled by default (but enabled by default in the Eleventy WebC plugin).
As noted in the JavaScript API section above, the compile
method returns four different properties:
page.setBundlerMode(true);
let { html, css, js, components } = await page.compile();
By default, <style>
and <script>
elements in component files are removed from individual component markup and aggregated together for re-use elsewhere (you could write this to a file, or use as Critical CSS in another layout template—the Eleventy plugin will smooth this over for you). This includes <link rel="stylesheet">
and <script src>
when the URLs point to files on the file system (remote URL sources are not yet supported).
Note that if a <style>
is nested inside of declarative shadow root template (e.g. <template shadowrootmode>
or the deprecated <template shadowroot>
), it is also left as is and not aggregated.
You can also opt out of aggregation on a per-element basis using <style webc:keep>
or <script webc:keep>
.
page.webc
:
<my-component>Default slot</my-component>
components/my-component.webc
:
<style>
my-component {
color: rebeccapurple;
}
</style>
Compilation results:
page.setBundlerMode(true);
let results = await page.compile();
// `results`:
{
html: "<my-component>Default slot</my-component>",
css: ["my-component { color: rebeccapurple; }"],
js: [],
components: ["page.webc", "components/my-component.webc"]
}
The order of aggregated styles and scripts is based on the dependency graph of the components in play (the order is noted in the components
array, a list of component file names).
See webc:scoped
on the WebC Reference
You can also transform individual element content using the setTransform
method.
let component = new WebC();
let md = new MarkdownIt({ html: true });
component.setTransform("md", async (content) => {
// async-friendly
return md.render(content);
});
Now you can automatically transform markdown in your WebC templates via the webc:type
attribute.
<template webc:type="md">
# Header
</template>
Compiles to:
<h1>Header</h1>
- Bonus feature:
webc:type
supports a comma separated list of transforms.
Note that the <template webc:type>
node is compiled away. If you’d like to keep it around, use webc:keep
(e.g. <template webc:type webc:keep>
).
We do provide two built-in transforms in WebC: JavaScript Render Functions (webc:type="render"
) and CSS scoping (webc:scoped
). Those are covered in separate sections. You can override these with the setTransform
API but it is generally recommended to add your own named transform!
See webc:if
on the WebC Reference
See webc:for
on the WebC Reference
See Attributes and webc:root
on the WebC Reference
See Props (properties) on the WebC Reference
See Dynamic Attributes and Properties on the WebC Reference
See @attributes
on the WebC Reference
See webc:type
(JavaScript Render Functions) on the WebC Reference
See @html
on the WebC Reference
See @text
on the WebC Reference
If you want to add custom JavaScript functions for use in render functions, @html
, or dynamic attributes you can use the setHelper
method.
import { WebC } from "@11ty/webc";
let page = new WebC();
page.setHelper("alwaysBlue", () => {
return "Blue"
});
And alwaysBlue()
is now available:
<script webc:type="js">
alwaysBlue()
</script>