open-lexicon
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1.4.9 • Public • Published

npm

Open Lexicon Web Component

Usage

Open Lexicon is an open source web component that any website can use. To use this in your site, add a script tag to your header component with the following script tag:

<head>
    <!-- Other header elements... -->
    <script type="module" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/open-lexicon@1.1.0/build/ol-provider.min.js"></script>
</head>

Once you have done so, you should see the Open Lexicon toolbar on your site.

Install

Our element can be downloaded here, or installed from npm.

Developing

We are using modern-web.dev's @web/dev-server for previewing the project without additional build steps. Web Dev Server handles resolving Node-style "bare" import specifiers, which aren't supported in browsers. It also automatically transpiles JavaScript and adds polyfills to support older browsers. See modern-web.dev's Web Dev Server documentation for more information.

Note that before the first time you run the dev server, you must first build the component with (see Build):

npm run build

To run the dev server and open the project in a new browser tab:

npm run serve

There is a development HTML file located at /dev/index.html that you can view at http://localhost:8000/dev/index.html. Note that this command will serve your code using Lit's development mode (with more verbose errors). To serve your code against Lit's production mode, use npm run serve:prod.

Build

This uses the TypeScript compiler to produce JavaScript that runs in modern browsers.

To build the JavaScript version of your component and place the files in the build output folder:

npm run build

To watch files and rebuild when the files are modified, run the following command in a separate shell:

npm run build:watch

Both the TypeScript compiler and lit-analyzer are configured to be very strict. You may want to change tsconfig.json to make them less strict.

See the dev documentation for more information getting started.

Testing

We are currerntly using modern-web.dev's @web/test-runner along with Mocha, Chai, and some related helpers for testing. See the modern-web.dev testing documentation for more information.

Tests can be run with the test script, which will run your tests against Lit's development mode (with more verbose errors) as well as against Lit's production mode:

npm test

For local testing during development, the test:dev:watch command will run your tests in Lit's development mode (with verbose errors) on every change to your source files:

npm test:watch

Alternatively the test:prod and test:prod:watch commands will run your tests in Lit's production mode.

Editing

If you use VS Code, use the lit-plugin extension, which enables some extremely useful features for lit-html templates:

  • Syntax highlighting
  • Type-checking
  • Code completion
  • Hover-over docs
  • Jump to definition
  • Linting
  • Quick Fixes

The project is setup to recommend lit-plugin to VS Code users if they don't already have it installed.

Linting

Linting of TypeScript files is provided by ESLint and TypeScript ESLint. In addition, lit-analyzer is used to type-check and lint lit-html templates with the same engine and rules as lit-plugin.

The rules are mostly the recommended rules from each project, but some have been turned off to make LitElement usage easier. The recommended rules are pretty strict, so you may want to relax them by editing .eslintrc.json and tsconfig.json.

To lint the project run:

npm run lint

Formatting

Prettier is used for code formatting. It has been pre-configured according to the Lit's style. You can change this in .prettierrc.json.

Prettier has not been configured to run when committing files, but this can be added with Husky and and pretty-quick. See the prettier.io site for instructions.

Static Site

This project includes a simple website generated with the eleventy static site generator and the templates and pages in /docs-src. The site is generated to /docs and intended to be checked in so that GitHub pages can serve the site from /docs on the master branch.

To enable the site go to the GitHub settings and change the GitHub Pages "Source" setting to "master branch /docs folder".

To build the site, run:

npm run docs

To serve the site locally, run:

npm run docs:serve

To watch the site files, and re-build automatically, run:

npm run docs:watch

The site will usually be served at http://localhost:8000.

Bundling and minification

This project currently doesn't include any build-time optimizations like bundling or minification. We recommend publishing components as unoptimized JavaScript modules, and performing build-time optimizations at the application level. This gives build tools the best chance to deduplicate code, remove dead code, and so on.

For information on building application projects that include LitElement components, see Build for production on the Lit site.

More information

See Get started on the Lit site for more information on how to use Lit.

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Install

npm i open-lexicon

Weekly Downloads

117

Version

1.4.9

License

BSD-3-Clause

Unpacked Size

442 kB

Total Files

170

Last publish

Collaborators

  • t0nedeaf
  • sjadim
  • blee126
  • nashex