Generate/register a custom element from a preact component. As of 3.0.0, this library implements the Custom Elements v1 spec. Previous versions (< 3.0.0) implemented the v0 proposal, which was only implemented in Chrome and is abandoned.
Import CustomElement
and call with your component a tag name *, and a list of attribute names you want to observe:
import register from 'preact-custom-element';
const Greeting = ({ name = 'World' }) => (
<p>Hello, {name}!</p>
);
register(Greeting, 'x-greeting', ['name']);
* Note: as per the Custom Elements specification, the tag name must contain a hyphen.
Use the new tag name in HTML, attribute keys and values will be passed in as props:
<x-greeting name="Billy Jo"></x-greeting>
Output:
<p>Hello, Billy Jo!</p>
The Custom Elements V1 specification requires explictly stating the names of any attributes you want to observe. From your Preact component perspective, props
could be an object with any keys at runtime, so it's not always clear which props should be accepted as attributes.
If you omit the third parameter to register()
, the list of attributes to observe can be specified using a static observedAttributes
property on your Component. This also works for the Custom Element's name, which can be specified using a tagName
static property:
import register from 'preact-custom-element';
// <x-greeting name="Bo"></x-greeting>
class Greeting extends Component {
// Register as <x-greeting>:
static tagName = 'x-greeting';
// Track these attributes:
static observedAttributes = ['name'];
render({ name }) {
return <p>Hello, {name}!</p>;
}
}
register(Greeting);
If no observedAttributes
are specified, they will be inferred from the keys of propTypes
if present on the Component:
// Other option: use PropTypes:
function FullName(props) {
return <span>{props.first} {props.last}</span>
}
FullName.propTypes = {
first: Object, // you can use PropTypes, or this
last: Object // trick to define untyped props.
};
register(FullName, 'full-name');