furls

0.10.0 • Public • Published

furls: Synchronize form state (and other state) with URL

The furls library makes it easy to synchronize form state (e.g. checkboxes, radio buttons, and text/textarea inputs) with the query part of the page's URL. This makes it easy to bookmark/share/link the current state of a web app, and makes the browser's back button act as an undo action. The library can also synchronize the classes of a particular element to represent the form state, making it easy to customize styles in response to form state. For examples of furls in action, see the font-webapp library which builds upon it.

Basic Usage

To define a global window.Furls, include <script src="furls.js"></script> in your HTML, via either:

  • Local npm install furls and use <script src="node_modules/furls/furls.js></script>
  • CDN <script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/furls/furls.js"></script>

If you're using a build system supporting NPM modules via require, use Furls = require('furls').

Simple example of usage in CoffeeScript:

update = (changed) ->
  ## @ is the furls instance
  if changed.foo
    console.log "foo changed from #{changed.foo.oldValue} to #{changed.foo.value}"
  for name, value of @getState()  # mapping of names/ids to values
    console.log "#{name} is currently #{value}"

furls = new Furls()        # create input handler
.addInputs()               # auto-add all inputs
.on 'stateChange', update  # call update(changed) when any input changes
.syncState()               # auto-keep URL's search in sync with form state
.syncClass()               # auto-keep <html>'s class in sync with form state

API

Furls objects supports the following API:

Inputs

<input> elements can generally be specified by string ID, DOM element, or furls' internal representation of the input (see below).

  • .addInputs(query = 'input, select, textarea'): Start tracking all inputs matching the specified query selector (a valid input to document.querySelectorAll). The default query includes all <input>, <select>, and <textarea> elements in the document.
  • .configInput(input, options): Modify the encode and decode methods, or minor attribute, as described under Input Objects, for an already added input. Useful after bulk .addInputs() to configure a specific input.
  • .addInput(input, options = {}): Start tracking the specified input. Optionally, you can specify manual encode and decode methods, or minor attribute, as described under Input Objects. Degenerates to .configInput if input is already tracked.
  • .removeInput(input): Stop tracking the specified input.
  • .removeInputs(query): Stop tracking all matching inputs. Sometimes it's easier to specify what not to track than what to track.
  • .clearInputs(): Stop tracking all inputs.
  • .get(input): Get the value of input (as convenient short-hand).
  • .set(input, value): Set the value of input to value as if the user did, triggering change events if appropriate. (Note that manually setting a DOM's value attribute does not trigger events, so use this instead.)
  • .maybeChange(input): Check whether the value of input has changed, and trigger change events if appropriate. (In case the DOM's value attribute changed manually without calling .set.)
  • .findInput(input): Get the internal representation of the specified input.
  • .getInputEvents(input): Returns which events to monitor for input input. Defaults to ['input', 'change'], which should cover all input types on all browsers, but you could override this function to listen for custom DOM events. Redundant events are coalesced so they generate only one furls inputChange events.

States / URL Synchronization

  • .syncState(history = 'push', loadNow = true): Automatically keep the document's URL's search component in sync with the state of the inputs. When a form changes input, the new URL either gets "pushed" (when history is 'push', so the back button returns to the previous state) or "replaced" (when history is 'replace', so the back button leaves the page). See the difference between pushState and replaceState. loadNow specifies whether to immediately set the inputs' state according to the current URL's search component (default true).
  • .loadURL(url = document.location, trigger = true): Manually set the inputs' state according to url's search component, and trigger change events if trigger is true (default yes). If you've called .syncState, this gets automatically called during popstate events, but this can be useful if you want to load a stored state of some kind.
  • .setURL(history = 'push', force = false): Manually set the document's URL's search component to match the state of the inputs. history can be push or replace as in .syncState(). If you want to push the current state even if the state hasn't changed, set force to true.
  • .getState(): Return object state with attribute state[name] for each input with that name equal to the value of the input (from the checked or value attribute). For each group of radio buttons, this object stores a single mapping from the group's name to the selected button's value (like HTML forms).
  • .getSearch(): Return state in URL search format (?key=value&...).
  • .getRelativeURL: Return URL to self (document.location.pathname) with search given by .getSearch().

Class Synchronization

  • .syncClass(query = ':root', prefix = '', updateNow = true): Synchronizes the classList of the specified DOM query (which can also be just a DOM element or an array of DOM elements) to match the state of all "discrete" tracked inputs. Classes are of the form NAME-VALUE, prefixed by prefix; for example, a checkbox with name box can be tested with CSS queries .box-true and .box-false.
  • .discreteValue(input): Returns whether the given input has a "discrete" value, and thus .syncClass will synchronize its class. By default, this includes all inputs of type "checkbox" and "radio", but you could override it to include a different subset of inputs.

Events

  • .on(event, listener): Call listener when event occurs.
  • .off(event, listener): Stop calling listener when event occurs.
  • .trigger(event, ...): Force event to occur with specified arguments. (You probably shouldn't need this.)

There are currently three types of events that occur:

  • 'inputChange': An input changed in value. (Null changes don't count.) Argument is the internal representation of the input (see below).
  • 'stateChange': One or more inputs changed in value, aggregating together potentially several 'inputChange' events (e.g. when loading from URL). (Null changes don't count.) Argument is an object changed with an attribute changed[name] for each changed input with that name, giving the internal representation of the input (see below). When a radio button changes, changed[name] will be the newly selected radio button (excluding all other buttons with the same name i.e. group). Triggered after individual inputChange events.
  • 'loadURL': All input values were just loaded from the URL (caused by syncState from browser navigation or initial loading on startup, or from calling loadURL manually). Argument is the URL's search component. Trigger after inputChange and stateChange events.

Helpers

You're unlikely to need these functions, unless you're being clever. You can override them, however, to get custom behaviors.

  • getParameterByName(name, search = window.location.search): Returns the value from any name=value in the specified URL search string. In most cases, you should use loadURL which calls this repeatedly.
  • getInputValue(input): Given an input object, computes its current value in the format described under Input Objects. In most cases, you should use .get to get the current value.
  • getInputDefaultValue(input): Given an input object, computes its default value in the format described under Input Objects. In most cases, you should use .findInput and .defaultValue.
  • setInputValue(input, value): Given an input object, sets its value according to a given value in the format described under Input Objects, without triggering any events. In most cases, you should use .set to set the value of an input, which also triggers the relevant events.
  • queueMicrotask(task): Schedules to call task before next browser render, if window.queueMicrotask is available. As a fallback, runs task after the next browser render via setTimeout(task, 0).

Input Objects

The internal representation of an input (as returned by e.g. findInput) is an object with (at least) the following attributes:

  • .id: id attribute of the <input> element (should be unique)
  • .type: type attribute of the <input> element, or "textarea" in the case of <textarea> elements.
  • .name: name attribute of the <input> element, or else its id (differs from id for radio buttons, where name defines groups). This is the key for the state object returned by .getState(), and what ends up in the URL.
  • .dom: The DOM object of the <input> element
  • .defaultValue: The specified default value of the <input> element (from the defaultChecked or defaultValue attribute)
  • .value: Current value of the <input> element (from the checked or value attribute). For checkboxes, this is true or false. For radio buttons, this is the value attribute if selected, and undefined if not selected. For type=number and type=range inputs, this is automatically parsed into a Number. For <select multiple>, this is an array of <option> value strings; for a single-value <select>, this is a single <option> value string.
  • .oldValue: The previous value of the <input> element (in particular during change events)

In addition, you can add the following attributes, via configInput or when calling addInput:

  • .encode(value): Encode the specified value into a string for the URL. For example, you can reduce number precision, or replace characters that encode verbosely into characters that encode more succinctly. Don't worry about URL encoding; whatever you return will be further encoded via encodeURIComponent and mapping space to +. This method gets called with this set to the input object.
  • .decode(value): Decode the specified string encoding from the URL into a value for this input. For example, you can undo character encodings you did in .encode. If your .encode doesn't need special decoding (e.g. it reduced number precision), then you don't need to specify .decode. Don't worry about URL encoding; the value argument will already be decoded via decodeURIComponent and mapping + to space. This method gets called with this set to the input object.
  • .minor: Boolean specifying whether changes to this input should be considered "minor". If all changed fields are minor, then the history mode is forced to be 'replace'.

You can make your custom encoding and decoding methods depend on the state of other inputs (using e.g. furls.get() or furls.getState()), provided those inputs do not also have custom encodings (otherwise the decoding order would be unclear). Specifically, when loading an entire URL (via loadURL or on startup with syncState), all inputs without custom decoding are loaded first, so that the inputs with custom decoding can depend on them. For example, here is how you could add optional ROT47 encoding/decoding to a text input:

furls.configInput 'text',
  encode: rot47 = (s) ->
    return s unless furls.get 'rot'
    s.split ''
    .map (c) =>
      code = c.charCodeAt(0)
      return c unless 33 <= code <= 126
      String.fromCharCode 33 + (code + 14) % 94
    .join ''
  decode: rot47

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