Mithril 2.0.4

Components

Structure

Components are a mechanism to encapsulate parts of a view to make code easier to organize and/or reuse.

Any JavaScript object that has a view method is a Mithril component. Components can be consumed via the m() utility:

// define your component
var Example = {
    view: function(vnode) {
        return m("div", "Hello")
    }
}

// consume your component
m(Example)

// equivalent HTML
// <div>Hello</div>

Lifecycle methods

Components can have the same lifecycle methods as virtual DOM nodes. Note that vnode is passed as an argument to each lifecycle method, as well as to view (with the previous vnode passed additionally to onbeforeupdate):

var ComponentWithHooks = {
    oninit: function(vnode) {
        console.log("initialized")
    },
    oncreate: function(vnode) {
        console.log("DOM created")
    },
    onbeforeupdate: function(newVnode, oldVnode) {
        return true
    },
    onupdate: function(vnode) {
        console.log("DOM updated")
    },
    onbeforeremove: function(vnode) {
        console.log("exit animation can start")
        return new Promise(function(resolve) {
            // call after animation completes
            resolve()
        })
    },
    onremove: function(vnode) {
        console.log("removing DOM element")
    },
    view: function(vnode) {
        return "hello"
    }
}

Like other types of virtual DOM nodes, components may have additional lifecycle methods defined when consumed as vnode types.

function initialize(vnode) {
    console.log("initialized as vnode")
}

m(ComponentWithHooks, {oninit: initialize})

Lifecycle methods in vnodes do not override component methods, nor vice versa. Component lifecycle methods are always run after the vnode's corresponding method.

Take care not to use lifecycle method names for your own callback function names in vnodes.

To learn more about lifecycle methods, see the lifecycle methods page.


Passing data to components

Data can be passed to component instances by passing an attrs object as the second parameter in the hyperscript function:

m(Example, {name: "Floyd"})

This data can be accessed in the component's view or lifecycle methods via the vnode.attrs:

var Example = {
    view: function (vnode) {
        return m("div", "Hello, " + vnode.attrs.name)
    }
}

NOTE: Lifecycle methods can also be defined in the attrs object, so you should avoid using their names for your own callbacks as they would also be invoked by Mithril itself. Use them in attrs only when you specifically wish to use them as lifecycle methods.


State

Like all virtual DOM nodes, component vnodes can have state. Component state is useful for supporting object-oriented architectures, for encapsulation and for separation of concerns.

Note that unlike many other frameworks, mutating component state does not trigger redraws or DOM updates. Instead, redraws are performed when event handlers fire, when HTTP requests made by m.request complete or when the browser navigates to different routes. Mithril's component state mechanisms simply exist as a convenience for applications.

If a state change occurs that is not as a result of any of the above conditions (e.g. after a setTimeout), then you can use m.redraw() to trigger a redraw manually.

Closure component state

In the above examples, each component is defined as a POJO (Plain Old JavaScript Object), which is used by Mithril internally as the prototype for that component's instances. It's possible to use component state with a POJO (as we'll discuss below), but it's not the cleanest or simplest approach. For that we'll use a closure component, which is simply a wrapper function which returns a POJO component instance, which in turn carries its own, closed-over scope.

With a closure component, state can simply be maintained by variables that are declared within the outer function:

function ComponentWithState(initialVnode) {
    // Component state variable, unique to each instance
    var count = 0

    // POJO component instance: any object with a
    // view function which returns a vnode
    return {
        oninit: function(vnode){
            console.log("init a closure component")
        },
        view: function(vnode) {
            return m("div",
                m("p", "Count: " + count),
                m("button", {
                    onclick: function() {
                        count += 1
                    }
                }, "Increment count")
            )
        }
    }
}

Any functions declared within the closure also have access to its state variables.

function ComponentWithState(initialVnode) {
    var count = 0

    function increment() {
        count += 1
    }

    function decrement() {
        count -= 1
    }

    return {
        view: function(vnode) {
            return m("div",
                m("p", "Count: " + count),
                m("button", {
                    onclick: increment
                }, "Increment"),
                m("button", {
                    onclick: decrement
                }, "Decrement")
            )
        }
    }
}

Closure components are consumed in the same way as POJOs, e.g. m(ComponentWithState, { passedData: ... }).

A big advantage of closure components is that we don't need to worry about binding this when attaching event handler callbacks. In fact this is never used at all and we never have to think about this context ambiguities.


POJO component state

It is generally recommended that you use closures for managing component state. If, however, you have reason to manage state in a POJO, the state of a component can be accessed in three ways: as a blueprint at initialization, via vnode.state and via the this keyword in component methods.

At initialization

For POJO components, the component object is the prototype of each component instance, so any property defined on the component object will be accessible as a property of vnode.state. This allows simple "blueprint" state initialization.

In the example below, data becomes a property of the ComponentWithInitialState component's vnode.state object.

var ComponentWithInitialState = {
    data: "Initial content",
    view: function(vnode) {
        return m("div", vnode.state.data)
    }
}

m(ComponentWithInitialState)

// Equivalent HTML
// <div>Initial content</div>

Via vnode.state

As you can see, state can also be accessed via the vnode.state property, which is available to all lifecycle methods as well as the view method of a component.

var ComponentWithDynamicState = {
    oninit: function(vnode) {
        vnode.state.data = vnode.attrs.text
    },
    view: function(vnode) {
        return m("div", vnode.state.data)
    }
}

m(ComponentWithDynamicState, {text: "Hello"})

// Equivalent HTML
// <div>Hello</div>

Via the this keyword

State can also be accessed via the this keyword, which is available to all lifecycle methods as well as the view method of a component.

var ComponentUsingThis = {
    oninit: function(vnode) {
        this.data = vnode.attrs.text
    },
    view: function(vnode) {
        return m("div", this.data)
    }
}

m(ComponentUsingThis, {text: "Hello"})

// Equivalent HTML
// <div>Hello</div>

Be aware that when using ES5 functions, the value of this in nested anonymous functions is not the component instance. There are two recommended ways to get around this JavaScript limitation, use arrow functions, or if those are not supported, use vnode.state.


Classes

If it suits your needs (like in object-oriented projects), components can also be written using classes:

class ClassComponent {
    constructor(vnode) {
        this.kind = "class component"
    }
    view() {
        return m("div", `Hello from a ${this.kind}`)
    }
    oncreate() {
        console.log(`A ${this.kind} was created`)
    }
}

Class components must define a view() method, detected via .prototype.view, to get the tree to render.

They can be consumed in the same way regular components can.

// EXAMPLE: via m.render
m.render(document.body, m(ClassComponent))

// EXAMPLE: via m.mount
m.mount(document.body, ClassComponent)

// EXAMPLE: via m.route
m.route(document.body, "/", {
    "/": ClassComponent
})

// EXAMPLE: component composition
class AnotherClassComponent {
    view() {
        return m("main", [
            m(ClassComponent)
        ])
    }
}

Class component state

With classes, state can be managed by class instance properties and methods, and accessed via this:

class ComponentWithState {
    constructor(vnode) {
        this.count = 0
    }
    increment() {
        this.count += 1
    }
    decrement() {
        this.count -= 1
    }
    view() {
        return m("div",
            m("p", "Count: " + count),
            m("button", {
                onclick: () => {this.increment()}
            }, "Increment"),
            m("button", {
                onclick: () => {this.decrement()}
            }, "Decrement")
        )
    }
}

Note that we must use arrow functions for the event handler callbacks so the this context can be referenced correctly.


Mixing component kinds

Components can be freely mixed. A class component can have closure or POJO components as children, etc...


Special attributes

Mithril places special semantics on several property keys, so you should normally avoid using them in normal component attributes.


Avoid anti-patterns

Although Mithril is flexible, some code patterns are discouraged:

Avoid fat components

Generally speaking, a "fat" component is a component that has custom instance methods. In other words, you should avoid attaching functions to vnode.state or this. It's exceedingly rare to have logic that logically fits in a component instance method and that can't be reused by other components. It's relatively common that said logic might be needed by a different component down the road.

It's easier to refactor code if that logic is placed in the data layer than if it's tied to a component state.

Consider this fat component:

// views/Login.js
// AVOID
var Login = {
    username: "",
    password: "",
    setUsername: function(value) {
        this.username = value
    },
    setPassword: function(value) {
        this.password = value
    },
    canSubmit: function() {
        return this.username !== "" && this.password !== ""
    },
    login: function() {/*...*/},
    view: function() {
        return m(".login", [
            m("input[type=text]", {
                oninput: function (e) { this.setUsername(e.target.value) },
                value: this.username,
            }),
            m("input[type=password]", {
                oninput: function (e) { this.setPassword(e.target.value) },
                value: this.password,
            }),
            m("button", {disabled: !this.canSubmit(), onclick: this.login}, "Login"),
        ])
    }
}

Normally, in the context of a larger application, a login component like the one above exists alongside components for user registration and password recovery. Imagine that we want to be able to prepopulate the email field when navigating from the login screen to the registration or password recovery screens (or vice versa), so that the user doesn't need to re-type their email if they happened to fill the wrong page (or maybe you want to bump the user to the registration form if a username is not found).

Right away, we see that sharing the username and password fields from this component to another is difficult. This is because the fat component encapsulates its state, which by definition makes this state difficult to access from outside.

It makes more sense to refactor this component and pull the state code out of the component and into the application's data layer. This can be as simple as creating a new module:

// models/Auth.js
// PREFER
var Auth = {
    username: "",
    password: "",
    setUsername: function(value) {
        Auth.username = value
    },
    setPassword: function(value) {
        Auth.password = value
    },
    canSubmit: function() {
        return Auth.username !== "" && Auth.password !== ""
    },
    login: function() {/*...*/},
}

module.exports = Auth

Then, we can clean up the component:

// views/Login.js
// PREFER
var Auth = require("../models/Auth")

var Login = {
    view: function() {
        return m(".login", [
            m("input[type=text]", {
                oninput: function (e) { Auth.setUsername(e.target.value) },
                value: Auth.username
            }),
            m("input[type=password]", {
                oninput: function (e) { Auth.setPassword(e.target.value) },
                value: Auth.password
            }),
            m("button", {
                disabled: !Auth.canSubmit(),
                onclick: Auth.login
            }, "Login")
        ])
    }
}

This way, the Auth module is now the source of truth for auth-related state, and a Register component can easily access this data, and even reuse methods like canSubmit, if needed. In addition, if validation code is required (for example, for the email field), you only need to modify setEmail, and that change will do email validation for any component that modifies an email field.

As a bonus, notice that we no longer need to use .bind to keep a reference to the state for the component's event handlers.

Don't forward vnode.attrs itself to other vnodes

Sometimes, you might want to keep an interface flexible and your implementation simpler by forwarding attributes to a particular child component or element, in this case Bootstrap's modal. It might be tempting to forward a vnode's attributes like this:

// AVOID
var Modal = {
    // ...
    view: function(vnode) {
        return m(".modal[tabindex=-1][role=dialog]", vnode.attrs, [
            //         forwarding `vnode.attrs` here ^
            // ...
        ])
    }
}

If you do it like above, you could run into issues when using it:

var MyModal = {
    view: function() {
        return m(Modal, {
            // This toggles it twice, so it doesn't show
            onupdate: function(vnode) {
                if (toggle) $(vnode.dom).modal("toggle")
            }
        }, [
            // ...
        ])
    }
}

Instead, you should forward single attributes into vnodes:

// PREFER
var Modal = {
    // ...
    view: function(vnode) {
        return m(".modal[tabindex=-1][role=dialog]", vnode.attrs.attrs, [
            //              forwarding `attrs:` here ^
            // ...
        ])
    }
}

// Example
var MyModal = {
    view: function() {
        return m(Modal, {
            attrs: {
                // This toggles it once
                onupdate: function(vnode) {
                    if (toggle) $(vnode.dom).modal("toggle")
                }
            },
            // ...
        })
    }
}

Don't manipulate children

If a component is opinionated in how it applies attributes or children, you should switch to using custom attributes.

Often it's desirable to define multiple sets of children, for example, if a component has a configurable title and body.

Avoid destructuring the children property for this purpose.

// AVOID
var Header = {
    view: function(vnode) {
        return m(".section", [
            m(".header", vnode.children[0]),
            m(".tagline", vnode.children[1]),
        ])
    }
}

m(Header, [
    m("h1", "My title"),
    m("h2", "Lorem ipsum"),
])

// awkward consumption use case
m(Header, [
    [
        m("h1", "My title"),
        m("small", "A small note"),
    ],
    m("h2", "Lorem ipsum"),
])

The component above breaks the assumption that children will be output in the same contiguous format as they are received. It's difficult to understand the component without reading its implementation. Instead, use attributes as named parameters and reserve children for uniform child content:

// PREFER
var BetterHeader = {
    view: function(vnode) {
        return m(".section", [
            m(".header", vnode.attrs.title),
            m(".tagline", vnode.attrs.tagline),
        ])
    }
}

m(BetterHeader, {
    title: m("h1", "My title"),
    tagline: m("h2", "Lorem ipsum"),
})

// clearer consumption use case
m(BetterHeader, {
    title: [
        m("h1", "My title"),
        m("small", "A small note"),
    ],
    tagline: m("h2", "Lorem ipsum"),
})

Define components statically, call them dynamically

Avoid creating component definitions inside views

If you create a component from within a view method (either directly inline or by calling a function that does so), each redraw will have a different clone of the component. When diffing component vnodes, if the component referenced by the new vnode is not strictly equal to the one referenced by the old component, the two are assumed to be different components even if they ultimately run equivalent code. This means components created dynamically via a factory will always be re-created from scratch.

For that reason you should avoid recreating components. Instead, consume components idiomatically.

// AVOID
var ComponentFactory = function(greeting) {
    // creates a new component on every call
    return {
        view: function() {
            return m("div", greeting)
        }
    }
}
m.render(document.body, m(ComponentFactory("hello")))
// calling a second time recreates div from scratch rather than doing nothing
m.render(document.body, m(ComponentFactory("hello")))

// PREFER
var Component = {
    view: function(vnode) {
        return m("div", vnode.attrs.greeting)
    }
}
m.render(document.body, m(Component, {greeting: "hello"}))
// calling a second time does not modify DOM
m.render(document.body, m(Component, {greeting: "hello"}))
Avoid creating component instances outside views

Conversely, for similar reasons, if a component instance is created outside of a view, future redraws will perform an equality check on the node and skip it. Therefore component instances should always be created inside views:

// AVOID
var Counter = {
    count: 0,
    view: function(vnode) {
        return m("div",
            m("p", "Count: " + vnode.state.count ),

            m("button", {
                onclick: function() {
                    vnode.state.count++
                }
            }, "Increase count")
        )
    }
}

var counter = m(Counter)

m.mount(document.body, {
    view: function(vnode) {
        return [
            m("h1", "My app"),
            counter
        ]
    }
})

In the example above, clicking the counter component button will increase its state count, but its view will not be triggered because the vnode representing the component shares the same reference, and therefore the render process doesn't diff them. You should always call components in the view to ensure a new vnode is created:

// PREFER
var Counter = {
    count: 0,
    view: function(vnode) {
        return m("div",
            m("p", "Count: " + vnode.state.count ),

            m("button", {
                onclick: function() {
                    vnode.state.count++
                }
            }, "Increase count")
        )
    }
}

m.mount(document.body, {
    view: function(vnode) {
        return [
            m("h1", "My app"),
            m(Counter)
        ]
    }
})

License: MIT. © Leo Horie.