A customizeable <code-mirror>
element that makes a code editor powered by CodeMirror.
Use it declaratively in plain HTML, or with web frameworks and libraries like Lit, Vue, Svelte, Solid.js, Angular, Ember, jQuery, React, and all others.
Use <code-mirror>
to create a text editor:
<code-mirror
id="editor"
basic-setup
language="html"
stylesheet="
/* Override the active line background color. */
.cm-activeLine {
background-color: #ff660044 !important
}
"
>
<template>
<h1>This is HTML content that will appear in the text editor.</h1>
<p>This is a paragraph that you'll be able to edit.</p>
</template>
</code-mirror>
For more usage examples, see ./examples/index.html. To
run the examples, clone the repo, then run npm install && npm run examples
.
STUB: This section needs expansion, but should be enough for anyone familiar with common build tooling in the webdev/JS ecosystem. Contributions very welcome!
Follow the guide on installing lume
from
CDN, but simply replace
lume
with code-mirror-el
. The process is otherwise the same.
Here's a live example on CodePen based on those instructions.
This assumes some familiarity with command lines and JavScript build tools.
First make sure you've installed Node.js so that we have the npm
package manager avaiable.
Install the code-mirror-el
package using the following in a terminal:
npm install code-mirror-el
Now, import
into your project and start using the element in HTML, JSX, html
template tags, etc.
import 'code-mirror-el'
// Ready to use
Optionally import the classes (especially useful for type annotations in TypeScript).
import {CodeMirror, CodeMirrorContentchangedEvent} from 'code-mirror-el'
const editor = document.querySelector('#editor') as CodeMirror
editor.addEventListener('contentchanged', (event: CodeMirrorContentchangedEvent) => {
// ...
})
See the example on CodePen.
If you've configured Solid.js for use with TypeScript,
then simply importing code-mirror-el
will register the JSX types for use
in Solid.js JSX templates.
import {createSignal} from 'solid-js'
import 'code-mirror-el' // This is all that is needed.
function SomeComponent() {
const [content, setContent] = createSignal('...')
// ...
return <code-mirror basic-setup language="js" content={content()} theme={someTheme}></code-mirror>
}
To get type checking in React JSX templates (or Preact JSX with React compat enabled in your tsconfig), import the React JSX types directly, as they will not be defined automatically like JSX types for Solid.js.
Note
React still does not yet have syntax for sending non-string data via JS properties to custom elements, so you must use a ref for that in React.
import {useState, useRef, useEffect} from 'react'
import 'code-mirror-el'
// Import JSX types specifically for React (or Preact with React compat enabled in
// your tsconfig).
import type {} from 'code-mirror-el/dist/CodeMirror.react-jsx'
function SomeComponent() {
const [content, setContent] = useState('...')
// ...
return <code-mirror basic-setup language="js" content={content}></code-mirror>
}
Note that in React 18 and below, all types are simply strings, and for multi-word properties use the dash-case attribute name. In React 19 and higher with improved Custom Elements support for setting element JS properties, use the camelCase prop names with full non-string type support.
React <= 18:
const styleString = '...CSS code here...'
return <code-mirror basic-setup language="js" content={content} stylesheet={styleString}></code-mirror>
React >= 19:
// This will not work in React 18 and below!
const styleSheet = new CSSStyleSheet()
stylesheet.replaceSync('...CSS code here...')
return <code-mirror basicSetup language="js" content={content} stylesheet={styleSheet}></code-mirror>
Note
Attributes in dash-case have an equivalent camelCase JS property. F.e. the
strip-indent
attribute maps its value to a stripIndent
property.
Note
Any non-string or non-boolean values described below are passed to the JS property directly, not to the attribute.
When true (when the attribute exists), CM's basicSetup
will be applied.
Note, use basicSetup
in React 19+.
A string to set the content of the editor to.
When true (default) common indentation will be removed. Useful for
example if the content
property is being set with a template string and
the content is indented to make the outer code more readable but the
indentation is undersired in the result inside the editor. Set the attribute
strip-indent="false"
to disable.
Note, use stripIndent
in React 19+.
When true (default) trims leading and trailing whitespace from content
.
The language to use. It should be a LanguageSupport object, an empty
extension (for plain text mode), or the strings "html", "js", or "text"
which are shortcuts for html()
, javascript()
, and []
, respectively.
Defaults to "js".
CSS styles to apply in <code-mirror>
's ShadowRoot. Useful for overriding
CM styles. Defaults to a style that hard codes the activeLine style to
overcome issues with selections not being visible on the active line
(vadimdemedes/thememirror#8).
The value can be
- a string containing CSS code
- a
<style>
element containing CSS code - a
<link>
element linking to a CSS file - a
CSSStyleSheet
instance
JS Property only. The theme extension to use. Defaults to noctisLilac
.
JS Property only. Any additional CodeMirror Extensions can be supplied here as an array.
JS Property only. Readonly. The CodeMirror EditorView
instance. It will be undefined until the <code-mirror>
element is connected.
JS Property only. Readonly. Shortcut for getting the current text content as a string.
The element takes no children except for a <template>
element to specify
content for the editor. The content
attribute/property takes precendence over
this, and <template>
content will only be used if content
is not set (i.e.
when content
is an empty string, which is the default).
When language
is set to "js"
, content is taken from a <script>
child of
the <template>
, otherwise content is taken from the template content. See
examples/index.html
for examples of both.
The <code-mirror>
element emits a contentchanged
event (a
CodeMirrorContentchangedEvent
object) whenever content of the editor changes.
The event has the following propeties beyond those from its base Event
class:
view
- The CodeMirrorEditorView
content
- Readonly getter that returns a string of the document content. Use sparingly if there are lots of lines (f.e. debounced).
See CodeMirror
for the JavaScript API powering the
underlying editor.
<code-mirror>
is written with
@lume/element
, a custom element library
with templating and reactivity powered by Solid.js. Also see
https://solid.js.com, https://primitives.solidjs.community, and
https://github.com/lume/classy-solid for APIs that are useful with
@lume/element
.