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YUI for control freaks
Christian Heilmann
The Ajax Experience, Boston, MA, Autumn 2008
Oh, hello there...
I’m Chris.
I am a lazy person.
I prefer doing things once, and do them right instead of
doing them over and over again.
For this, I need control.
I like having control.
Remote control
rubber duck
However, having too much control can be an issue.
Limitation is good.
Let’s do a quick rewind.
The Commodore 64
16 preset colours
resolution 160x200 pixels
4 colours per each 8x8 pixel block
Limitations that inspire different people in different
ways.
It is great to have a one size fits all solution.
... but it can be as cool to have a on-demand set of tools.
YUI is the latter.
It brings order to the chaos.
What chaos?
JavaScript is a part of a larger world.
JavaScript is a part of a larger world.
This is not the copyrighted
photo you are looking for
Browser
Interaction with other technologies (CSS, Markup)
Interaction with other scripts
Interaction with the backend
Interaction with the operating system.
Interaction with the user (with unknown ability)
Interaction with bad code (a.k.a. ads)
YUI deals with all of this.
Because it has to – we built it for industrial (Yahoo)
strength.
The first thing we needed to get are some sensible
constraints.
We did this with the Graded Browser Support:
http://developer.yahoo.com/yui/articles/gbs/
This gave us a defined playground, and we were able
to start tackling the other issues.
The first thing to tackle before you can even hope to build
interfaces are browser differences in CSS.
There is no such thing as an “unstyled page”.
There is no such thing as an “unstyled page”.
Good luck working around that one.
Unless you use reset.css
http://developer.yahoo.com/yui/reset/
Starting with a blank canvas
=
good.
What about typography?
Make it work across browsers with fonts.css
http://developer.yahoo.com/yui/fonts/
Even create layouts with grids.css
http://developer.yahoo.com/yui/grids/
Grids gives you an amazingly large amount of options and
layout permutations.
Everybody Duck!
There will be code
Wouldn’t it be cool to not know when to use which size
of the grid automatically?
This is where the next YUI gem comes in: DOM.
http://developer.yahoo.com/yui/dom
Using the DOM component, I can read out what happens in
the browser.
I can get the dimensions of the window, the dimensions of the browser, and the dimensions
of any element in the document – regardless of its
positioning.
Using DOM, I can create a YUI grid that works with all kind of
different browsers sizes.
http://yuiblog.com/blog/2008/06/25/autogrids
YAHOO.example.autoGrid = function(){ var container = YAHOO.util.Dom.get('doc') || YAHOO.util.Dom.get('doc2') || YAHOO.util.Dom.get('doc4') || YAHOO.util.Dom.get('doc3') || YAHOO.util.Dom.get('doc-custom'); if(container){ var sidebar = null; var classes = container.className; if(classes.match(/yui-t[1-3]|yui-left/)){ var sidebar = 'left'; } if(classes.match(/yui-t[4-6]|yui-right/)){ var sidebar = 'right'; } function switchGrid(){ var currentWidth = YAHOO.util.Dom.getViewportWidth();
if(currentWidth > 950){ container.id = 'doc2'; if(sidebar){ container.className = sidebar === 'left' ? 'yui-t3' : 'yui-t6'; } } if(currentWidth < 950){ container.id = 'doc'; if(sidebar){ container.className = sidebar === 'left' ? 'yui-t2' : 'yui-t5'; } } if(currentWidth < 760){ container.id = 'doc3'; if(sidebar){ container.className = sidebar === 'left' ? 'yui-t1' : 'yui-t4'; } }
if(currentWidth < 600){ container.id = 'doc3'; container.className = ''; } }; switchGrid(); function throttle(method, scope) { clearTimeout(method._tId); method._tId= setTimeout(function(){ method.call(scope); }, 100); }; YAHOO.util.Event.on(window,'resize',function(){ throttle(YAHOO.example.autoGrid.switchGrid,window); });
}; return { switchGrid:switchGrid };}();
What about monitoring the size of an element?
position:fixed is sexy!
It can however also render your site impossible to use.
var YD = YAHOO.util.Dom; YAHOO.util.Event.onDOMReady(toggleMenu); YAHOO.util.Event.on(window,'resize',function(){ toggleMenu(); }); function toggleMenu(){ var sidebar = YD.getRegion('sb'); var browser = YD.getViewportHeight(); YD.setStyle('sb','position', browser < sidebar.bottom ? 'static' : 'fixed' ); }
The DOM stepchild: Region
Using Region I can find out the dimensions of an element.
I can also find the region that is big enough to include two
regions, or the one that is the intersection of the two.
region example
YAHOO.util.Event.onDOMReady(function(){ var YD = YAHOO.util.Dom; var r1 = YD.getRegion('region-one'); var r2 = YD.getRegion('region-two'); var i = r1.intersect(r2); var u = r1.union(r2); var intersect = document.createElement('div'); document.body.appendChild(intersect); YD.setStyle(intersect,'position','absolute'); YD.setStyle(intersect,'background','#c0c'); YD.setStyle(intersect,'width',i.right-i.left + 'px'); YD.setStyle(intersect,'height',i.bottom-i.top + 'px'); YD.setStyle(intersect,'z-index',100); YD.setXY(intersect,i);
var union = document.createElement('div'); document.body.appendChild(union); YD.setStyle(union,'position','absolute'); YD.setStyle(union,'background','#000'); YD.setStyle(union,'opacity',.5); YD.setStyle(union,'width',u.right-u.left + 'px'); YD.setStyle(union,'height',u.bottom-u.top + 'px'); YD.setStyle(union,'z-index',90); YD.setXY(union,u); });
This gives me full control to avoid any overlap!
What about things the browser does not tell me?
Wouldn’t it be cool to find out when the font is resized?
http://alistapart.com/articles/fontresizing
You can detect the font size in several ways:
Include an element with a known size in ems and read its
offsetHeight and offsetWidth in an interval...
...or use an iframe with em sizing off-screen and subscribe
to its resize event.
Or use the YUI container module anywhere on your
page... :)
YAHOO.namespace('example.container'); YAHOO.util.Event.onDOMReady(function(){ YAHOO.example.container.module1 = new YAHOO.widget.Panel( 'module1', { close:true, draggable:true, constraintoviewport:true } ); YAHOO.example.container.module1.render(); YAHOO.widget.Module.textResizeEvent.subscribe( function(o){ console.log('Text has been resized!') } ); });
YAHOO.namespace('example.container'); YAHOO.util.Event.onDOMReady(function(){ YAHOO.example.container.module1 = new YAHOO.widget.Panel( 'module1', { close:true, draggable:true, constraintoviewport:true } ); YAHOO.example.container.module1.render(); YAHOO.widget.Module.textResizeEvent.subscribe( function(o){ console.log('Text has been resized!') } ); });
This works with one feature of YUI event that is very close to
my heart: Custom Events.
... which is so cool that all the other big libraries now have it
aswell :)
Custom Events allow you to notify an unknown amount of
listeners about what is happening...
... sending information not necessarily accessible to them
when it happens.
Every single YUI component has a lot of Custom Events you
can subscribe to.
Say for example you want to make sure to securely chain
animation sequences...
//This is the first animation; this one will //fire when the button is clicked. var move = new YAHOO.util.Anim("animator", { left: {from:0, to:75} }, 1); //This is the second animation; it will fire //when the first animation is complete. var changeColor = new YAHOO.util.ColorAnim( "animator", { backgroundColor: {from:"#003366", to:"#ff0000"} }, 1); //Here's the chaining glue: We subscribe to the //first animation's onComplete event, and in //our handler we animate the second animation: move.onComplete.subscribe(function() { changeColor.animate(); });
//Here we set up our YUI Button and subcribe to //its click event. When clicked, it will //animate the first animation: var start = new YAHOO.widget.Button("startAnim"); start.subscribe("click", function() { //reset the color value to the start so that //the animation can be run multiple times: YAHOO.util.Dom.setStyle("animator", "backgroundColor", "#003366"); move.animate(); });
//You can also make use of the onStart and onTween //custom events in Animation; here, we'll log all //of changeColor's custom events and peek at their //argument signatures: changeColor.onStart.subscribe(function() { YAHOO.log("changeColor animation is starting.", "info", "example"); }); changeColor.onTween.subscribe(function(s, o) { YAHOO.log("changeColor onTween firing with these arguments: " + YAHOO.lang.dump(o), "info", "example"); }); changeColor.onComplete.subscribe(function(s, o) { YAHOO.log("changeColor onComplete firing with these arguments: " + YAHOO.lang.dump(o), "info", "example"); });
That is a lot of control!
{font resizing example}
Knowledge is power.
This is why YUI comes with a lot of tools to gain knowledge
about what is happening under the hood of your
application.
YUI logger gives you a cross-browser console to show
values.
Death to alert()!
All YUI components come as a debug version which log
everything that is going on to the logger.
You can even include the logger on the fly with a
bookmarklet.
http://blog.rajatpandit.com/sandbox/yuilogger/index.html
If you need even more control, there is the YUI
profiler.
http://developer.yahoo.com/yui/profiler/
And the YUI test framework for test driven development.
http://developer.yahoo.com/yui/yuitest/
If you like even more control...
Then you must be Nicholas Zakas or Dean Edwards!
On a code level, YUI comes out-of-the-box with
namespacing.
Which – if used correctly – keeps large amounts of code readable and maintainable.
YAHOO.lang also comes with a lot of validation methods to ensure things are what they
are.
So how is YUI good for control freaks?
Built on agreed standards
Separated into modules each dealing with one task
Constant reporting of what is going on
Own Debugging environment
Here’s another small thing I prepared earlier:
Using Event and Dom I can control the visible part:
function move(e){ y = YAHOO.util.Event.getXY(e); if(y[1] > size){ render(y); } }; function render(y){ var d = YAHOO.util.Dom; var real = y[1] - d.getDocumentScrollTop(); d.setStyle(top,'height',real-size+'px'); d.setStyle(bottom,'top',real+size+'px'); var h = d.getViewportHeight() - real + size; d.setStyle(bottom,'height',h + 'px'); };
http://yuiblog.com/blog/2008/09/30/reading-blinds/
What does the future hold?
YUI3
http://developer.yahoo.com/yui/3/
Include on demand
Multiple sandboxed instances in a page
Modularity on CSS level (per element reset)
Every event is a custom event
Christian Heilmann
http://wait-till-i.com
http://scriptingenabled.org
http://twitter.com/codepo8
THANKS!http://icanhaz.com/yuicontrol