Write less JavaScript.
Create a website with many small Elm applications, powered by reusable Elm ports from NPM.
JavaScript can't provide the safety and guarantees that Elm can. But Elm requires you to use JavaScript to (1) launch Elm apps and (2) perform side effects. (Sending Websockets, saving to LocalStorage, etc.)
Elm Router minimizes the JavaScript you'll write by:
- Launching Elm apps in Elm instead of JavaScript.
- Powering Elm apps with generic, reusable port modules for side effects.
Make sure you understand how Elm and JavaScript interact.
Using npm:
$ npm install --save elm-router
Then add this to your JavaScript:
var elmRouter = require("elm-router");
elmRouter.start(Elm);
(Not sure where Elm
comes from? See the Elm tutorial.)
$ elm-package install http
$ elm-package install navigation
Note: Exact path to node_modules
may be different for you below.
{
...
"source-directories": [
...
"../../node_modules/elm-router/lib/elm"
],
...
}
$ elm-make --output elm.js ./MyApp.elm ./MyOtherApp.elm ../node_modules/elm-router/lib/elm/ElmRouter/App.elm
If you're using a build tool like Webpack or Brunch to run elm-make
for you, see this guide.
$ npm install -g elm-router
$ cd /path/to/elm/project <-- This directory must be in `source-directories` in elm-package.json
$ elm-router init
(Or just copy-and-paste from here.)
// Code that only runs on contact page:
Elm.ContactForm.App.embed(document.getElementById('contact_form'), {
showPhoneField: false,
successMessage: 'Thanks! We\'ll be in touch.'
});
Is replaced by this:
import Json.Encode exposing (object, string, bool)
routes location =
[ Route (OnUrl "^/contact$") -- Regex for contact page
[ EmbedWithFlags "ContactForm" "#contact_form" <| object
[ ("showPhoneField", bool False)
, ("successMessage", string "Thanks! We'll be in touch.")
]
, -- Other apps on contact page
]
]
For more information about building out your routes, see this guide.
Feel free to create an issue in the GitHub issue tracker.