Sort of like Sizzle for React, bill
is
a set of tools for matching React Element and Component trees against CSS selectors. bill
is meant to be a
substrate library for building more interesting and user friendly testing utilities. It probably shouldn't
be used as a standalone tool.
import { querySelectorAll } from 'bill';
let matches = querySelectorAll('div li.foo',
<div>
<List>
<li className='foo'>John</li>
<li>Betty</li>
</List>
</div>
)
matches.length // 1
matches[0].element // ReactElement{ type: 'li', props: { className: 'foo' } }
For selecting non string values, like custom Component types, you can use a tagged template strings
import { querySelectorAll, selector as s } from 'bill';
let min = 5;
let matches = querySelectorAll(s`div > ${List}, li[min=${min}]`,
<div>
<List>
<li min={min}>John</li>
<li>Betty</li>
</List>
</div>
)
matches.length // 2
matches[0].element // { type: List, props }
WARNING: mising module 'react/lib/ReactDOMComponentTree'
bill supports the latest React and back to v0.13.0, because a library like this involves the use of private API's, maintaining support across major versions of React is harder than normal. In particular we need to do dynamic requires to internal apis, which makes bundlers like Webpack warning about missing modules, and bundling with a less smart bundler hard.
Don't worry though they are missing because the version of React you are using doesn't have them, and thats ok, bill knows how to do its work on each supported version.
- id:
#foo
- classes:
.foo
- attributes:
div[propName="hi"]
ordiv[boolProp]
>
: direct descendentdiv > .foo
+
: adjacent sibling selector~
: general sibling selector:has()
: parent selectordiv:has(a.foo)
:not()
: negation:first-child
:last-child
:text
matches "text" (renderable) nodes, which may be a non string value (like a number):dom
matches only DOM components:composite
matches composite (user defined) components
- other pseudo selectors
- non string interpolations for anything other than "tag" or prop values
Nodes are a light object abstraction over both instances and elements that allow for a common matching and traversal API between the distinct types of React objects. The interface is similar to a traditional DOM node.
Most bill
methods that accept elements or instances will also accept a node,
allowing you to use the return values of the methods directly with other methods.
Node : {
nodeType: NODE_TYPE,
element: ReactElement,
instance: ReactComponent | HTMLElement,
privateInstance: ReactPrivateInstance,
nextSibling: Node,
prevSibling: Node,
parentNode: Node,
children: Array<Node>,
findAll: (test (node) => bool, includeSelf? : bool) => array<Node>
}
Their is a caveat to the publicInstance
property, when it comes to stateless functional components. Instead
of returning null
as React would, bill
returns the instance of the internal wrapper component. This is to allow,
potential chaining and also retrieval of the underlying DOM node if necessary (as in the example above).
Note: Nodes only have instances when matching against a rendered component tree
querySelectorAll()
traverses a react element or instance tree searching for nodes that match the provided selector.
As the name suggests it's analogous to document.querySelectorAll
. The return value
is an array of Nodes.
let matches;
let elements = (
<div>
<List>
<li className='foo'>John</li>
<li>Betty</li>
</List>
</div>
)
// find elements in the above element description
matches = bill.querySelectorAll('div li.foo', elements)
// "John"
let textContent = matches.reduce(
(str, node) => str + node.element.props.children, '')
// or search a rendered hierarchy
matches = bill.querySelectorAll('div li.foo', ReactDOM.render(elements))
let domNodes = matches.map(
node => ReactDOM.findDOMNode(node.instance))
Analogous to the DOM element.matches
method, matches
returns true if a give element, instance or node is matched
by the provided selector
.
let matches;
let elements = (
<div>
<List>
<li className='foo'>John</li>
<li>Betty</li>
</List>
</div>
)
let johnItem = bill
.querySelectorAll('div li', elements)
.filter(node => bill.matches('.foo', node))
// or search a rendered hierarchy
let bettyItem = bill
.querySelectorAll('div li.foo', ReactDOM.render(elements))
.filter(node => bill.matches(':not(.foo)', node))
A function used for tagged template strings,
You really only need to use the selector
function when you want to write a selector matching exact prop values or a
composite type.
selector`div > ${List}[length=${5}]`
A tree traversal utility function for finding nodes that return true
from the testFunction
. findAll
is similar to ReactTestUtils.findAllInRenderedTree
, but more robust and works on both elements and instance trees.
import { findAll, NODE_TYPES } from 'bill';
let found = findAll(elements, function (node) {
return node.nodeType === NODE_TYPES.COMPOSITE
})
Compiles a selector string into a function that matches nodes.
Registers a new pseudo selector with the compiler. The second parameter is a function that will be called with the pseudo selector's argument (if it exists). The handler function should return a function that matches a node.
// A simple `:text(foo)` pseudo selector
bill.registerPseudo('text', function(value) {
return function (node) {
return node.children
.filter(n => n.nodeType === NODE_TYPES.TEXT)
.every(node => node.element === value)
}
})
let matches = bill.querySelectorAll('li:text(john)',
<ul>
<li>betsy</li>
<li>john</li>
<li>yolanda</li>
</ul>
)
matches[0].instance // <li class='bar'>john</li>
For pseudoSelectors whose inner argument is a selector, you can compile it
to a test function with bill.compile
.
// We want to test if an element has a sibling that matches
// a selector e.g. :nextSibling(.foo)
bill.registerPseudo('nextSibling', function (selector) {
let matcher = bill.compile(selector);
return function (node) {
node = node.nextSibling
return !!node && matcher(node)
}
})
let matches = bill.querySelectorAll('li:nextSibling(li.baz)',
<ul>
<li className='foo'>1</li>
<li className='bar'>2</li>
<li className='baz'>3</li>
</ul>
)
matches[0].instance // <li class='bar'>2</li>
Similar to registerPseudo
you can also register new combinator selectors (*, >, ~, +) using the same pattern.
The handler function is called with the compiled selector segment.
Note: remember that selectors are matched right-to-left so the logic is generally reversed from what you might expect.
// lets implement the same previous sibling selector as above
// but with a nesting selector.
bill.registerNesting('!', test => node => {
node = node.nextSibling
return !!(node && test(node))
})
let matches = bill.querySelectorAll('li.baz ! li',
<ul>
<li className='foo'>1</li>
<li className='bar'>2</li>
<li className='baz'>3</li>
</ul>
)
matches[0].instance // <li class='bar'>2</li>
Set of constants that correspond to Node.nodeType
. Useful for filtering out types of nodes while traversing a tree.
NODE_TYPES.COMPOSITE
NODE_TYPES.DOM
NODE_TYPES.TEXT
Determine if an object is a Node object.