This addon provides a component that allows for rendering a block to a DOM element somewhere else on the page. The component retains typical Ember context in terms of bound data and action handling. Ember Wormhole is compatible with Ember FastBoot as of version 0.4.0, so long as the destination element is part of Ember's own templates.
View a live demo here: http://yapplabs.github.io/ember-wormhole/
The source code for the demo is available here: https://github.com/yapplabs/ember-wormhole/tree/master/tests/dummy/app
This library is particularly useful for cases where you have UI that is the logical child of a component but needs to render as a top-level DOM element, such as a confirmation dialog.
This component tracks its element's child nodes. When inserted into the DOM, it appends its child nodes to a destination element elsewhere. When removed from the DOM, it removes its child nodes, so as not to orphan them on the other side of the wormhole.
Nothing else changes -- data binding and action bubbling still flow according to
the Ember component hierarchy. That includes usages of yield
, so blocks provided
to ember-wormhole
simply appear in another part of the DOM.
We thought you'd never ask...
Given the following DOM:
<body class="ember-application">
<!-- Destination must be in the same element as your ember app -->
<!-- otherwise events/bindings will not work -->
<div id="destination">
</div>
<div class="ember-view">
<!-- rest of your Ember app's DOM... -->
</div>
</body>
and a template like this:
Then "Hello world!" would be rendered inside the destination
div.
If the ember-wormhole is destroyed its far-off children are destroyed too. For example, given:
If isWormholeEnabled
starts off true and becomes false, then the "Hello
world!" text will be removed from the destination
div.
Similarly, if you use ember-wormhole
in a route's template, it will
render its children in the destination element when the route is entered
and remove them when the route is exited.
Yes! Sometimes you feel like a wormhole. Sometimes you don't. Situations sometimes call for the same content to be rendered through the wormhole or in place.
In this example, renderInPlace
will override to
and cause the wormhole content to be rendered in place.
This technique is useful for:
- Presenting typically-wormholed content within a styleguide
- Toggling content back and forth through the wormhole
- Parlor tricks
You can provide an element directly to the wormhole. For example:
This usage may be appropriate when using wormhole with dynamic targets, such as rendering into all elements matching a selector.
This library is compatible with and tested against Ember 1.13 and higher.
With latest ember-wormhole and [email protected], you need to have a stable root element inside the wormhole block. This is something that the Ember Core team will continue to iterate and work on, but for now the work around is fairly straightforward.
Change:
Since Ember 3.21 there is also a native in-element
helper. This helper offer a bit less functionality than this addon,
but may be enough for your use case! For more info see
the in-element API docs
and the excellent article by Faith Or comparing ember-wormhole and in-element
To add the ember-wormhole add-on to an existing project, enter this command from the root of your EmberJS project:
ember install ember-wormhole
If you'd like to set up a new EmberJS application with the ember-wormhole sample application configured, follow these steps:
git clone
this repositorynpm install
bower install
ember try:testall
ember test
ember test --server
ember server
- Visit your app at http://localhost:4200.
For more information on using ember-cli, visit http://www.ember-cli.com/.
This addon was extracted from ember-modal-dialog. Contributions from @stefanpenner, @krisselden, @chrislopresto, @lukemelia, @raycohen and others. Yapp Labs is an Ember.js consultancy based in NYC.