Frameport enables you to fake and display your responsive components in real life media queries!
Frameport was created so I could display frameports of components in a style guide. It creates iframes with your component (html, css and javascript) that acts as natural viewports, thus making use of your media queries! It is a zero dependency package!
npm i -S @phun-ky/frameport
Go here to read the full API documentation.
Click here for a demo on codepen.io
Option | Type | Required | Description |
---|---|---|---|
html | string | âś“ | The html you want to use in the viewport example |
height | string | number | The height of the viewport, either as a string (e.g., '400') or a number (e.g., 400) | |
width | string | number | The width of the viewport, either as a string (e.g., '600') or a number (e.g., 600) | |
className | string | Class names to be given the generated iframe | |
style | string | Inline styles (CSS) to be inserted into a <style> -tag in the <head> -tag of the generated html |
|
css | string | A CSS file to be appended to the <head> -tag of the generated html. NOTE! This needs to be on the same domain and relative to root! |
|
code | string | Custom JavaScript code to be inserted into a <script> -tag in the <body> -tag in the generated html |
|
javascript | string | A JavaScript file to be inserted in the <body> -tag of the generated html. NOTE! This needs to be on the same domain and relative to root! |
|
headers | string[] | An array of HTTP headers to include when fetching the HTML content | |
viewports | string | The viewports to generate for examples. This is a string wxh for example: 375x667 . If you want more viewports, you can separate them with a comma: 375x667,360x740,768x1024 . NOTE! If not viewports are used, you need to set width ! |
|
templateSelector | string | Selector to the template | |
templateElement | HTMLElement | Template element | |
target | string | To identify this as a target to use to generate the frameports |
Types can be found in @phun-ky/frameport/dist/frameport.d.ts
.
Either import and run the required functions:
import frameport from '@phun-ky/frameport';
// do stuff
frameport(document.getElementById('target'), {
width: 667,
html: '<h1>FOO</h1>'
});
Or place these script
in your web page:
<script src="../path/to/frameport.js"></script>
And then follow the steps below that suites your needs :)
If you want to control frameport a bit more, you have some options. Apply one of these attributes to the script element for different types of initialization:
<script src="../frameport.js" data-<manual|instant|dom|lazy></script>
Tag | Description |
---|---|
data-manual |
Makes window.frameport() available to be used when you feel like it |
data-instant |
fires off frameport() right away |
data-dom |
Waits for DOMContentLoaded |
data-lazy |
Lazy loads frameport() per specced element |
If no attribute is applied, it will default to data-dom
, as in, it will initialize when DOMContentLoaded
is fired.
If you're importing frameport instead of with a script tag, you can use the following approach to apply lazy loading:
import frameport from '@phun-ky/frameport';
export const lazy = (): void => {
const frameportObserverTarget = new IntersectionObserver((els, observer) => {
els.forEach((el: IntersectionObserverEntry) => {
if (el.intersectionRatio > 0) {
const {
dataset: {
frameportTemplate: templateSelector,
frameportVh: height,
frameportVw: width,
frameportCss: css,
frameportStyle: style,
frameportCode: code,
frameportJs: javascript,
frameportClass: className,
frameportHeaders: headers,
frameportViewports: viewports,
},
} = el.target as HTMLElement;
let html = el.target.innerHTML;
let templateElementToUse = el.target as HTMLElement;
if (templateSelector) {
const templateElement = document.querySelector(templateSelector);
if (templateElement) {
html = templateElement.innerHTML;
templateElementToUse = templateElement as HTMLElement;
}
}
const options = {
templateSelector,
templateElement: templateElementToUse,
height,
width,
html,
css,
style,
code,
javascript,
className,
headers: getHeaders(headers),
viewports,
};
dom(el.target as HTMLElement, options);
observer.unobserve(el.target);
}
});
});
document.querySelectorAll('[data-frameport]').forEach((el) => {
frameportObserverTarget.observe(el);
});
};
Place the script
tag at the bottom of your page, right before the </body>
-tag:
<script src="../path/to/@phun-ky/frameport/dist/frameport.js"></script>
Or with a CDN:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/@phun-ky/frameport/dist/frameport.js"></script>
And then follow the steps below to display the frameports you want :)
With this approach, the script will locate given template and produce frameports based on that template and insert them right after the template. The original template will be hidden:
<div
data-frameport
data-frameport-css="/css/ph.css"
data-frameport-style="body{background-color: #84a295 !important;}"
data-frameport-target
data-frameport-template="#template"
data-frameport-vw="667"
data-frameport-vh="375"
></div>
<div id="template">
<main class="ph" style="height: 100vh">
<button class="ph button" type="button">Primary</button>
</main>
</div>
The content of the [data-frameport]
-container is the html you want to display in the frameport.
With this approach, you decide where the frameports are added. The script will locate given target and produce frameports based on the given template and insert them in that target. The original template will be hidden:
<div
data-frameport
data-frameport-css="/css/ph.css"
data-frameport-style="body{background-color: #84a295 !important;}"
data-frameport-viewports="375x667,360x740,768x1024"
>
<main class="ph" style="height: 100vh">
<div class="ph app">
<p class="ph lead">Look mah, I'm in an iframe</p>
<button class="ph button" type="button">Primary</button>
</div>
</main>
</div>
The above example code will generate 3 iframes with given viewports.
The content of the #template
-container is the html you want to display in the frameport.
This approach is useful if you want to use a device decorator to mimic appearance of a device.
tag | description |
---|---|
data-frameport | To identify this as the template to use for generating the responsive examples. Required |
data-frameport-target | To identify this as a target to use to generate the frameports |
data-frameport-template | Selector to the template |
data-frameport-width | The viewport width. Required |
data-frameport-height | The viewport height. |
data-frameport-css | A CSS file to be appended to the <head> -tag of the generated html. NOTE! This needs to be on the same domain and relative to root! For example: /dist/yourcss.css |
data-frameport-style | Inline styles (CSS) to be inserted into a <style> -tag in the <head> -tag of the generated html |
data-frameport-code | Custom JavaScript code to be inserted into a <script> -tag in the <body> -tag in the generated html |
data-frameport-js | A JavaScript file to be inserted in the <body> -tag of the generated html. NOTE! This needs to be on the same domain and relative to root! For example: /dist/yourjs.js |
data-frameport-class | Class names to be given the generated iframe |
data-frameport-viewports | The viewports to generate for examples. This is a string wxh for example: 375x667 . If you want more viewports, you can separate them with a comma: 375x667,360x740,768x1024 . Required |
data-frameport-headers | An array of HTTP headers to include when fetching the HTML content |
If you want to contribute, please read the CONTRIBUTING.md and CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
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