/** * @alternateClassName Ext.DomHelper * @singleton * * The DomHelper class provides a layer of abstraction from DOM and transparently supports creating elements via DOM or * using HTML fragments. It also has the ability to create HTML fragment templates from your DOM building code. * * ## DomHelper element specification object * * A specification object is used when creating elements. Attributes of this object are assumed to be element * attributes, except for 4 special attributes: * * * **tag**: The tag name of the element * * **children (or cn)**: An array of the same kind of element definition objects to be created and appended. These * can be nested as deep as you want. * * **cls**: The class attribute of the element. This will end up being either the "class" attribute on a HTML * fragment or className for a DOM node, depending on whether DomHelper is using fragments or DOM. * * **html**: The innerHTML for the element * * ## Insertion methods * * Commonly used insertion methods: * * * {@link #append} * * {@link #insertBefore} * * {@link #insertAfter} * * {@link #overwrite} * * {@link #insertHtml} * * ## Example * * This is an example, where an unordered list with 3 children items is appended to an existing element with id * 'my-div': * * var dh = Ext.DomHelper; // create shorthand alias * // specification object * var spec = { * id: 'my-ul', * tag: 'ul', * cls: 'my-list', * // append children after creating * children: [ // may also specify 'cn' instead of 'children' * {tag: 'li', id: 'item0', html: 'List Item 0'}, * {tag: 'li', id: 'item1', html: 'List Item 1'}, * {tag: 'li', id: 'item2', html: 'List Item 2'} * ] * }; * var list = dh.append( * 'my-div', // the context element 'my-div' can either be the id or the actual node * spec // the specification object * ); * * Element creation specification parameters in this class may also be passed as an Array of specification objects. * This can be used to insert multiple sibling nodes into an existing container very efficiently. For example, to add * more list items to the example above: * * dh.append('my-ul', [ * {tag: 'li', id: 'item3', html: 'List Item 3'}, * {tag: 'li', id: 'item4', html: 'List Item 4'} * ]); * * ## Templating * * The real power is in the built-in templating. Instead of creating or appending any elements, createTemplate returns * a Template object which can be used over and over to insert new elements. Revisiting the example above, we could * utilize templating this time: * * // create the node * var list = dh.append('my-div', {tag: 'ul', cls: 'my-list'}); * // get template * var tpl = dh.createTemplate({tag: 'li', id: 'item{0}', html: 'List Item {0}'}); * * for(var i = 0; i < 5; i++){ * tpl.append(list, i); // use template to append to the actual node * } * * An example using a template: * * var html = '"{0}" href="{1}" class="nav">{2}'; * * var tpl = new Ext.DomHelper.createTemplate(html); * tpl.append('blog-roll', ['link1', 'http://www.tommymaintz.com/', "Tommy's Site"]); * tpl.append('blog-roll', ['link2', 'http://www.avins.org/', "Jamie's Site"]); * * The same example using named parameters: * * var html = '"{id}" href="{url}" class="nav">{text}'; * * var tpl = new Ext.DomHelper.createTemplate(html); * tpl.append('blog-roll', { * id: 'link1', * url: 'http://www.tommymaintz.com/', * text: "Tommy's Site" * }); * tpl.append('blog-roll', { * id: 'link2', * url: 'http://www.avins.org/', * text: "Jamie's Site" * }); * * ## Compiling Templates * * Templates are applied using regular expressions. The performance is great, but if you are adding a bunch of DOM * elements using the same template, you can increase performance even further by "compiling" the template. The way * "compile()" works is the template is parsed and broken up at the different variable points and a dynamic function is * created and eval'ed. The generated function performs string concatenation of these parts and the passed variables * instead of using regular expressions. * * var html = '"{id}" href="{url}" class="nav">{text}'; * * var tpl = new Ext.DomHelper.createTemplate(html); * tpl.compile(); * * // ... use template like normal * * ## Performance Boost * * DomHelper will transparently create HTML fragments when it can. Using HTML fragments instead of DOM can * significantly boost performance. * * Element creation specification parameters may also be strings which are used as innerHTML. */ Ext.define('Ext.dom.Helper', function() { var afterbegin = 'afterbegin', afterend = 'afterend', beforebegin = 'beforebegin', beforeend = 'beforeend', bbValues = ['BeforeBegin', 'previousSibling'], aeValues = ['AfterEnd', 'nextSibling'], bb_ae_PositionHash = { beforebegin: bbValues, afterend: aeValues }, fullPositionHash = { beforebegin: bbValues, afterend: aeValues, afterbegin: ['AfterBegin', 'firstChild'], beforeend: ['BeforeEnd', 'lastChild'] }; return { singleton: true, alternateClassName: [ 'Ext.DomHelper', 'Ext.core.DomHelper' ], emptyTags: /^(?:br|frame|hr|img|input|link|meta|range|spacer|wbr|area|param|col)$/i, confRe: /^(?:tag|children|cn|html|tpl|tplData)$/i, endRe: /end/i, // Since cls & for are reserved words, we need to transform them attributeTransform: { cls : 'class', htmlFor : 'for' }, closeTags: {}, detachedDiv: document.createElement('div'), decamelizeName: function () { var camelCaseRe = /([a-z])([A-Z])/g, cache = {}; function decamel (match, p1, p2) { return p1 + '-' + p2.toLowerCase(); } return function (s) { return cache[s] || (cache[s] = s.replace(camelCaseRe, decamel)); }; }(), generateMarkup: function(spec, buffer) { var me = this, specType = typeof spec, attr, val, tag, i, closeTags; if (specType === "string" || specType === "number") { buffer.push(spec); } else if (Ext.isArray(spec)) { for (i = 0; i < spec.length; i++) { if (spec[i]) { me.generateMarkup(spec[i], buffer); } } } else { tag = spec.tag || 'div'; buffer.push('<', tag); for (attr in spec) { if (spec.hasOwnProperty(attr)) { val = spec[attr]; if (val !== undefined && !me.confRe.test(attr)) { if (typeof val === "object") { buffer.push(' ', attr, '="'); me.generateStyles(val, buffer, true).push('"'); } else { buffer.push(' ', me.attributeTransform[attr] || attr, '="', val, '"'); } } } } // Now either just close the tag or try to add children and close the tag. if (me.emptyTags.test(tag)) { buffer.push('/>'); } else { buffer.push('>'); // Apply the tpl html, and cn specifications if ((val = spec.tpl)) { val.applyOut(spec.tplData, buffer); } if ((val = spec.html)) { buffer.push(val); } if ((val = spec.cn || spec.children)) { me.generateMarkup(val, buffer); } // we generate a lot of close tags, so cache them rather than push 3 parts closeTags = me.closeTags; buffer.push(closeTags[tag] || (closeTags[tag] = '' + tag + '>')); } } return buffer; }, /** * Converts the styles from the given object to text. The styles are CSS style names * with their associated value. * * The basic form of this method returns a string: * * var s = Ext.DomHelper.generateStyles({ * backgroundColor: 'red' * }); * * // s = 'background-color:red;' * * Alternatively, this method can append to an output array. * * var buf = []; * * ... * * Ext.DomHelper.generateStyles({ * backgroundColor: 'red' * }, buf); * * In this case, the style text is pushed on to the array and the array is returned. * * @param {Object} styles The object describing the styles. * @param {String[]} [buffer] The output buffer. * @param {Boolean} [encode] `true` to {@link Ext.String#htmlEncode} property values if they * are going to be inserted as HTML attributes. * @return {String/String[]} If buffer is passed, it is returned. Otherwise the style * string is returned. */ generateStyles: function (styles, buffer, encode) { var a = buffer || [], name, val; for (name in styles) { if (styles.hasOwnProperty(name)) { val = styles[name]; // Since a majority of attributes won't have html characters (basically // restricted to fonts), we'll check first before we try and encode it // because it's less expensive and this method gets called a lot. name = this.decamelizeName(name); if (encode && Ext.String.hasHtmlCharacters(val)) { val = Ext.String.htmlEncode(val); } a.push(name, ':', val, ';'); } } return buffer || a.join(''); }, /** * Returns the markup for the passed Element(s) config. * @param {Object} spec The DOM object spec (and children). * @return {String} */ markup: function(spec) { if (typeof spec === "string") { return spec; } var buf = this.generateMarkup(spec, []); return buf.join(''); }, /** * Applies a style specification to an element. * @param {String/HTMLElement} el The element to apply styles to * @param {String/Object/Function} styles A style specification string e.g. 'width:100px', or object in the form {width:'100px'}, or * a function which returns such a specification. */ applyStyles: function(el, styles) { Ext.fly(el).applyStyles(styles); }, /** * @private * Fix for browsers which do not support createContextualFragment */ createContextualFragment: function(html){ var div = this.detachedDiv, fragment = document.createDocumentFragment(), length, childNodes; div.innerHTML = html; childNodes = div.childNodes; length = childNodes.length; // Move nodes into fragment, don't clone: http://jsperf.com/create-fragment while (length--) { fragment.appendChild(childNodes[0]); } return fragment; }, /** * Creates new DOM element(s) without inserting them to the document. * @param {Object/String} o The DOM object spec (and children) or raw HTML blob * @return {HTMLElement} The new uninserted node */ createDom: function(o, parentNode){ var me = this, markup = me.markup(o), div = me.detachedDiv, child; div.innerHTML = markup; child = div.firstChild; // Important to clone the node here, IE8 & 9 have an issue where the markup // in the first element will be lost. // var ct = document.createElement('div'), // a, b; // ct.innerHTML = '