package melange-webapi

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Melange bindings to the DOM

Install

Dune Dependency

Authors

Maintainers

Sources

melange-webapi-0.21.0.tbz
sha256=13005ea0d9f1d688389cc3abf4154fc61da60aaaf541c9d3ee508366bc1b12c1
sha512=33a05a521a546bb21dc6372c8d196d39da164d2352c26985169e9045f68147dae6c092b6e4249fa8cc6198223b90e1d29bdd581c00cc46e0dce7c1144dd48b18

README.md.html

melange-webapi

Bindings to the DOM and other Web APIs.

The bindings are currently undocumented, but as the code mostly just consists of external declarations with type signatures, the code itself is fairly self-documenting. The bindings generally also correspond very well to the Web APIs they bind to, so using MDN along with GitHub should go a long way.

Installation

opam install melange-webapi

Then add melange-webapi to the libraries field in your dune file:

  (libraries melange-webapi)

Usage

See the examples folder

Please only use the modules exposed through the toplevel module Webapi, for example Webapi.Dom.Element. In particular, don't use the 'flat' modules like Webapi__Dom__Element as these are considered private and are not guaranteed to be backwards-compatible.

Some notes on the DOM API

The DOM API is mostly organized into interfaces and relies heavily on inheritance. The ergonomics of the API is also heavily dependent on dynamic typing, which makes it somewhat challenging to implement a thin binding layer that is both safe and ergonomic. To achieve this we employ subtyping and implementation inheritance, concepts which aren't very idiomatic to OCaml (or Reason), but all the more beneficial to understand in order to be able to use these bindings effectively.

Subtyping

The Dom types, and the relationships between them, are actually defined in the Dom module that ships with Melange (Source code), where you'll find a bunch of types that look like this:

type _element('a);
type element_like('a) = node_like(_element('a));
type element = element_like(_baseClass);

This is subtyping implemented with abstract types and phantom arguments. The details of how this works isn't very important (but see #23 for a detailed explanation of how exactly this trickery works) in order to just use them, but there are a few things you should know:

  • If you expand the alias of a concrete DOM type, you'll discover it's actually a list of abstract types. e.g. element expands to _baseClass _element _node _eventTarget_like This means element is a subtype of _element, _node and _eventTarget_like.

  • The _like type are "open" (because they have a type variable). This means that a function accepting an 'a element_like will accept any "supertype" of element_like. A function accepting just an element will only accept an element (Technically element is actually a "supertype" of element_like too).

This system works exceptionally well, but has one significant flaw: It makes type errors even more complicated than they normally are. If you know what to look for it's not that bad, but unfortunately the formatting of these errors don't make looking for it any easier. We hope to improve that in other ways (see BetterErrors)

Implementation inheritance

If you've looked through the source code a bit, you've likely come across code like this:

include Webapi__Dom__EventTarget.Impl({ type nonrec t = t });
include Webapi__Dom__Node.Impl({ type nonrec t = t });
include Webapi__Dom__ParentNode.Impl({ type nonrec t = t });
include Webapi__Dom__NonDocumentTypeChildNode.Impl({ type nonrec t = t });
include Webapi__Dom__ChildNode.Impl({ type nonrec t = t });
include Webapi__Dom__Slotable.Impl({ type nonrec t = t });
include Impl({ type nonrec t = t });

This is the implementation inheritance. Each "inheritable" module defines an "Impl" module where all its exported functions are defined. include Webapi__Dom__Node.Impl { type nonrec t = t }; means that all the functions in Webapi__Dom__Node.Impl should be included in this module, but with the t type of that module replaced by the t type of this one. And that's it, it now has all the functions.

Implementation inheritance is used instead of subtyping to make it easier to understand which functions operate on any given "subject". If you have an element and you need to use a function defined in Node, let's say removeChild you cannot just use Node.removeChild. Instead you need to use Element.removeChild, which you can since Element inherits from Node. As a general rule, always use the function in the module corresponding to the type you have. You'll find this makes it very easy to see what types you're dealing with just by reading the code.

Changes

See CHANGELOG.md.

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