Mithril is a small, yet great javascript MVC framework that is faster and more flexible than most others. Here's the Haxe version for Mithril 1.0+, with some useful extra features thanks to macros and the type inference.
Standard procedure: haxelib install mithril
and then -lib mithril
in your .hxml file.
Mithril has a great introduction on its website and an astounding amount of documentation, so I'll only highlight what you need to get started with the Haxe version here.
Because Javascript is so dynamic and Haxe is strongly typed, the balance between flexibility and compiler safety can be difficult. When using Mithril, you will create components that will be used together with the Mithril API. For these objects you should implement the Mithril
interface. Here's an example of a Mithril component:
import mithril.M;
class TodoComponent implements Mithril
{
var todos : Array<Todo>;
public function new(todos) {
this.todos = todos;
}
// When implementing Mithril, the last m() expression
// or Array of m(), is returned automatically.
public function view() {
m("div", [
m("h1", "To do"),
m("table", todos.map(function(todo) {
m("tr", [
m("td", m("input[type=checkbox]", {
onclick: function(e) todo.done = e.target.checked,
checked: todo.done
})),
m("td", todo.description)
]);
}))
]);
}
// Program entry point
static function main() {
var todos = [
new Todo("Learn Haxe"),
new Todo("??"),
new Todo("Profit!")
];
M.mount(js.Browser.document.body, new TodoComponent(todos));
}
}
class Todo
{
public var done : Bool = false;
public var description : String;
public function new(description) {
this.description = description;
}
}
- Use M, not m!
import mithril.M;
, then useM
instead ofm
for the whole API. As you see above, the only exception is when usingm()
, you can use that without prefixing withM
. - The
route
methods are available by a simple translation:M.route.link
for example, becomesM.routeLink
.
Because of the slight mismatch between Haxe classes and the classless Mithril structure, an important difference is that in lifecycle methods, this
points to vnode.tag
instead of vnode.state
. Otherwise this
would have pointed to another object when inside instance methods.
This is usually nothing you have to worry about if you're using Haxe classes for your components and state. In that case this
will work just normally.
This repo has some examples that can be interesting to test. Clone it, open a prompt in the directory and run:
haxelib install mithril
Then select one of the following:
A collection of two demo apps, available on the Mithril site.
haxe client.hxml
nekotools server -d bin
- Open https://localhost:2000/ in a browser.
A simple, although incomplete, e-commerce site to demonstrate the power of Mithril.
haxe webshop.hxml
nekotools server -d bin/webshop
- Open https://localhost:2000/ in a browser.
Live demo here: https://ciscoheat.github.io/webshop
If you prefer a bare-bones example (doesn't require cloning), create the following two files and follow the instructions below:
index.html
<!doctype html>
<body>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/mithril.js"></script>
<script src="example.js"></script>
</body>
Example.hx
import mithril.M;
class User
{
public var name : String;
public function new(name) {
this.name = name;
}
}
class Example implements Mithril
{
var user : User;
public function new() {
this.user = new User("Thorin Oakenshield");
}
public function view() [
// Display an input field
m('input', {
// Updates the model on input
oninput: function(e) user.name = e.target.value,
// The redraw triggered by the oninput event will update
// the input field value from the model automatically
value: user.name
}),
// Display a div with class .user and some style
m('.user', {style: {margin: "15px"}}, user.name)
];
// Program entry point
static function main() {
M.mount(js.Browser.document.body, new Example());
}
}
Compile and run with:
haxe -lib mithril -js example.js -main Example
- Open index.html in a browser.
The rendering part of Mithril has been ported to Haxe, so you can now enjoy writing Mithril templates, and have them rendered to HTML anywhere. Here's a class to get you started:
import mithril.MithrilNodeRender;
import mithril.M.m;
class Main {
static function main() {
var view = m("ul", [
m("li", "item 1"),
m("li", "item 2"),
]);
// <ul><li>item 1</li><li>item 2</li></ul>
Sys.println(new MithrilNodeRender().render(view));
}
}
Without too much hassle, it's possible to render a Mithril component/view serverside on Node.js. Run the following in the repo directory:
npm install
haxelib install hxnodejs
haxe server.hxml
cd bin
node server.js
outputs a simple HTML rendering example.
node server.js server
Starts a server on https://localhost:2000 that executes the same code on server and client. The server generates the HTML so the page is perceived to load quickly and search engines can index it, then the client enables the functionality.
As a bonus, a Neko version of Example 1 will also be compiled. Test it with
neko server.n
The MithrilNodeRender
is tested with travix and should work on all targets.
Finally, if you're using Node.js, you can install and use Mithril from npm instead of the Haxe port. To do that, define -D mithril-native
.
Feedback is always welcome! Open an issue and give me a piece of your mind. :)