#Wiselinks
Wiselinks makes following links and submitting forms in your web application faster.
You may find Wiselinks similar to Turbolinks or Pjax, but Wiselinks works as a whitelist rather than blacklist. We tried to make Wiselinks as easy to use as Turbolinks are but also as configurable as Pjax.
Try Wiselinks online in our demo application:
Please be advised that Javascript events in wiselinks-0.5.0 are not backward compatible.
Wiselinks uses History.js library to perform requests.
Wiselinks works in all major browsers including browsers that do not support HTML History API out of the box.
Wiselinks | Turbolinks | PJAX | |
---|---|---|---|
Work in HTML5 browsers | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Work in browsers without History API | Yes, with hashbang (can be switched off) | No, degrades to normal request processing | No, degrades to normal request processing |
Work without JavaScript | No, degrades to normal request processing | No, degrades to normal request processing | No, degrades to normal request processing |
Form processing | Yes | No | Yes (experimental feature) |
Form blank values exclusion | Yes (optional) | No | No |
Form values optimization | Yes | No | No |
Assets change detection | Yes, by calculating assets MD5 hash on boot | Yes, by parsing document head on every request | Yes, manually |
30x HTTP redirects processing | Yes | No | Yes |
##Installation
Add this to your Gemfile:
gem 'wiselinks'
Then do:
bundle install
Restart your server and you're now using wiselinks!
Copy wiselinks-x.y.z.js
or wiselinks-x.y.z.min.js
from build
folder in this project to your project.
Create Wiselinks object in your application.js.coffee
:
#= require jquery
#= require wiselinks
$(document).ready ->
window.wiselinks = new Wiselinks()
You can disable HTML4 browsers support easily:
#= require jquery
#= require wiselinks
$(document).ready ->
window.wiselinks = new Wiselinks($('body'), html4: false )
Or you can add some more options, if you want:
#= require jquery
#= require jquery.role
#= require wiselinks
$(document).ready ->
# DOM element with id = "content" will be replaced after data load.
window.wiselinks = new Wiselinks($('#content'))
$(document).off('page:loading').on(
'page:loading'
(event, $target, render, url) ->
console.log("Loading: #{url} to #{$target.selector} within '#{render}'")
# code to start loading animation
)
$(document).off('page:redirected').on(
'page:redirected'
(event, $target, render, url) ->
console.log("Redirected to: #{url}")
# code to start loading animation
)
$(document).off('page:always').on(
'page:always'
(event, xhr, settings) ->
console.log("Wiselinks page loading completed")
# code to stop loading animation
)
$(document).off('page:done').on(
'page:done'
(event, $target, status, url, data) ->
console.log("Wiselinks status: '#{status}'")
)
$(document).off('page:fail').on(
'page:fail'
(event, $target, status, url, error, code) ->
console.log("Wiselinks status: '#{status}'")
# code to show error message
)
Click on links with data-push
attribute will fire History.pushState() event.
Data from the request will replace content of the container that was passed to Wiselinks (default is $('body')
)
<ul class="menu">
<li>
<a href="/" data-push="true">Home</a>
</li>
<li>
<a href="/contacts" data-push="true">Contacts</a>
</li>
</ul>
Click on links with data-replace
will fire History.replaceState() event.
Data from the request will replace content of the container that was passed to Wiselinks (default is "body")
<div class="dialog">
<a href="/step2" data-replace="true">Proceed to the next step</a>
</div>
Click on following links will fire History.pushState() event.
Data from the request will be pasted into <div id="catalog">
. This configuration is widely when you have list of items that are paginated, sorted or maybe grouped by some attributes and you want to update only these items and nothing more on page.
<ul class="pagination">
<li>
<span>1</span>
</li>
<li>
<a href="/?page=2" data-push="true" data-target="#catalog">2</a>
</li>
<li>
<a href="/?page=3" data-push="true" data-target="#catalog">3</a>
</li>
<li>
<a href="/?page=4" data-push="true" data-target="#catalog">4</a>
</li>
</ul>
<ul class="sort">
<li>
<a href="/?sort=title" data-push="true" data-target="#catalog">Sort by Title</a>
</li>
<li>
<a href="/?sort=price" data-push="true" data-target="#catalog">Sort by Price</a>
</li>
</ul>
<div id="catalog">
<!-- the list of your items -->
...
</div>
Form processing
Wiselinks can process forms. After submit button is clicked, Wiselinks will perform a request to form url with form attributes serialized to a string. Wiselinks always performs a HTTP GET request.
<div class="filter">
<form action="/" method="get" data-push="true" data-target="@catalog">
<input type="text" size="30" name="title" id="title">
<select name="scope" id="scope">
<option value="">All Tax Liens</option>
<option value="accruing">Accruing Interest</option>
<option value="awaiting_payment">Awaiting Payment</option>
<option value="closed">Closed</option>
<option value="trashed">Trash</option>
</select>
<input type="submit" value="Find" name="commit">
</form>
</div>
<div role="catalog">
<!-- the list of your items -->
...
</div>
data-include-blank-url-params
During form submit Wiselinks excludes blank parameters to make your URLs cleaner. You can disable this behaviour with data-include-blank-url-params
attribute.
<div class="filter">
<form action="/" method="get" data-push="true" data-target="@catalog" data-include-blank-url-params="true">
<input type="text" size="30" name="title" id="title">
<input type="submit" value="Find" name="commit">
</form>
</div>
data-optimize-url-params
Array parameters category_ids[]=1&category_ids[]=2&category_ids[]=3
are optimized to more human readable category_ids=1,2,3
. To changed this behaviour use data-optimize-url-params
attribute.
<div class="filter">
<form action="/" method="get" data-push="true" data-target="@catalog" data-optimize-url-params="false">
<input type="text" size="30" name="title" id="title">
<input type="submit" value="Find" name="commit">
</form>
</div>
The idea of Wiselinks is that you should render only content that you need in current request. Usually you don't need to reload your stylesheets and javascripts on every request.
X-Wiselinks
header is passed with every Wiselinks request. Server should respond with content that should be inserted into $target
.
In Rails after installing Wiselinks gem, all requests that have X-Wiselinks
header will be automatically processed within 'app/views/layouts/wiselinks' layout, that basically has only yield
operator. Of course you can override layout name by redefining wiselinks_layout
method in your controller.
While using Wiselinks you can rely on DOMContentLoaded
or jQuery.ready()
to trigger your JavaScript code, but Wiselinks gives you some additional useful event to deal with the lifecycle of the page:
page:loading ($target, render, url)
Event is triggered before the XMLHttpRequest
is initialised and performed.
-
$target – JQuery object in which result of the request will be inserted;
-
url - URL of the request that will be performed;
-
render – what should be rendered; can be 'template' or 'partial';
page:redirected ($target, render, url)
Event is triggered when you were redirected during XMLHttpRequest
(with HTTP 30x status).
-
$target – jQuery object in which result of the request will be inserted;
-
url - URL where you have been redirected to;
-
render – what should be rendered; can be 'template' or 'partial';
page:done ($target, status, url, data)
Event is triggered if the request succeeds.
-
$target – jQuery object that was updated with the request;
-
status – a string describing the status;
-
url – url of the request;
-
data – content of the request;
page:fail ($target, status, url, error, code)
Event is triggered if the request fails.
-
$target – jQuery object that had to be updated with the request;
-
status – a string describing the status;
-
url – url of the request;
-
error – a string describing the type of error that occurred;
-
code – HTTP response status code
page:always ($target, status, url)
Event is triggered after each request.
-
$target – jQuery object that had to be updated with the request;
-
status – a string describing the status;
-
url – url of the request;
So if you want to show a client-side loading spinner, you could listen for page:loading
to start it and page:always
to stop it.
Wiselinks adds a couple of methods to ActionDispatch::Request
. These methods are mostly syntax sugar and don't have any complex logic, so you can use them or not.
Method returns true
if current request is initiated by Wiselinks (has X-Wiselinks
header), false
otherwise.
Method returns true
if current request is initiated by Wiselinks and client want to render template (X-Wiselinks != 'partial'
), false
otherwise.
Method returns true
if current request is initiated by Wiselinks and client want to render partial (X-Wiselinks == 'partial'
), false
otherwise.
You can enable assets change detection with Wiselinks. To do this you have to enable assets digests by adding this to you environment file:
config.assets.digest = true
Then you should append your layout by adding this to head section:
<%= wiselinks_meta_tag %>
Now Wiselinks will track changes of your assets and if anything will change, your page will be reloaded completely.
Wiselinks handles page titles by passing X-Wiselinks-Title
header with response. To set this header you can use wiselinks_title
helper (in Rails).
<% wiselinks_title("Wiselinks is awesome") %>
<div>
<!-- your content -->
...
</div>
Of course you can use wiselinks_title
helper in your own helpers too.
Wiselinks follows 30x HTTP redirects. Location is updated in browser with X-Wiselinks-Url
header that is setting up automatically (in Rails) on every wiselinks request.
By default, if Wiselinks cannot find target that you specified during initialization, it will fail silently. But you can override this behaviour:
#= require jquery
#= require wiselinks
$(document).ready ->
window.wiselinks = new Wiselinks(
$('something that does not exist'),
target_missing: 'exception'
)
[Wiselinks] Target missing
exception will be thrown. This also works for data-target
attributes.
If you want to handle these analytics tools, then you should add handler to page:done
event.
Let's say, that you have two objects, first is _gaq
– instance of Google Analytics, second is _metrika
– instance of Yandex Metrika. Then you have to add the following code somewhere in your application.js.coffee
.
$(document).off('page:done').on(
'page:done'
(event, $target, status, url, data) ->
_gaq.push(['_trackPageview', url])
_metrika.hit(url)
)
After this, you will have correct page view statistics in your analytics tools.
We crafted example application that uses nearly all features of Wiselinks so you can see it in action.
-
GitHub Repository: https://github.com/igor-alexandrov/wiselinks_example
-
Live Example: http://wiselinks.herokuapp.com/
- Fork the project.
- Make your feature addition or bug fix.
- Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull)
- Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches.
Wiselinks is maintained by JetRockets.
Contributors:
It is free software, and may be redistributed under the terms specified in the LICENSE file.