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Unis is a new front-end framework. Its innovative compilation strategy and component API built help you create web UI more easily.

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@unis/core CI/CD @unis/dom CI/CD @unis/router CI/CD @unis/transition CI/CD @unis/vite-preset CI/CD @unis/babel-preset CI/CD

Unis is a new front-end framework. Its innovative compilation strategy and component API built help you create web UI more easily.

Performance

Installation

npm i @unis/core @unis/dom

Vite Development

npm i vite @unis/vite-preset -D

vite.config.js

import { defineConfig } from "vite";
import { unisPreset } from "@unis/vite-preset";

export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [unisPreset()],
});

tsconfig.json

{
  "compilerOptions": {
    "jsx": "react-jsx",
    "jsxImportSource": "@unis/core"
  }
}

index.html

<html>
  ...
  <body>
    <div id="root"></div>
    <script type="module" src="./index.tsx"></script>
  </body>
</html>

index.tsx

function App() {
  return () => <div>hello</div>;
}

render(<App />, document.querySelector("#root"));

Usage

Unis is not a replica of React, but a brand new framework that retains the user experience of React. Unis is easy to use, and those who are familiar with React can quickly get started.

Components

In Unis, the component is a higher-order function.

import { render } from "@unis/dom";

const App = () => {
  return () => (
    // Returns a function
    <div>hello world</div>
  );
};

render(<App />, document.querySelector("#root"));

Component State

The usage of useState in Unis is similar to React, but it should be noted that for the use method series in Unis, the defined type must be let. This is because Unis uses the Callback Reassign compilation strategy, and @callback-reassign/rollup-plugin helps us complete the Callback Reassign code.

import { useState } from "@unis/core";

const App = () => {
  let [msg, setMsg] = useState("hello");
  /**
   * Compile to:
   *
   * let [msg, setMsg] = useState('hello', ([$0, $1]) => { msg = $0; setMsg = $1 });
   */
  return () => <div>{msg}</div>;
};

Props

Directly using props in Unis will be unable to get the latest value, so Unis provides useProps.

import { useProps } from "@unis/core";

const App = (p) => {
  let { some } = useProps(p);
  /**
   * Compile to:
   *
   * let { some } = useProps(p, ({ some: $0 }) => { some = $0 });
   */
  return () => <div>{some}</div>;
};

Side Effects

Unis retains the familiar useEffect and useLayoutEffect methods from React, but the deps parameter is a function that returns an array.

import { useEffect } from "@unis/core";

const App = () => {
  useEffect(
    () => {
      // ...
      return () => {
        // Clean up...
      };
    },
    () => [] // deps is a function that returns an array
  );

  return () => <div>hello</div>;
};

Custom Hook

For Unis' custom hooks that have a return value, the use method should be used accordingly, due to the Callback Reassign compilation strategy mentioned earlier. We conventionally name custom hooks with a lowercase u at the beginning, to differentiate them from other functions and make them easy to import with IDE hints.

import { use, useState } from "@unis/core";

// Create a higher-order function for the custom hook
const uCount = () => {
  let [count, setCount] = useState(0);
  const add = () => setCount(count + 1);
  return () => [count, add];
};

// Use the hook through `use`
function App() {
  let [count, add] = use(uCount());
  /**
   * Compile to:
   *
   * let [count, add] = use(uCount(), ([$0, $1]) => { count = $0; add = $1 });
   */
  return () => <div onClick={add}>{count}</div>;
}

Features

Fragment

import { Fragment } from "@unis/core";

function App() {
  return () => (
    <Fragment>
      <div></div>
      <span></span>
    </Fragment>
  );
}

Portal

import { createPortal } from "@unis/core";

function App() {
  return () => createPortal(<div></div>, document.body);
}

Context

import { createContext } from "@unis/core";
import { render } from "@unis/dom";

const ThemeContext = createContext("light");

function App() {
  let theme = useContext(ThemeContext);

  return () => <div>{theme}</div>;
}

render(
  <ThemeContext.Provider value="dark">
    <App />
  </ThemeContext.Provider>,
  document.querySelector("#root")
);

Server-Side Rendering

Server

import express from "express";
import { renderToString } from "@unis/dom/server";

const app = express();

app.get("/", (req, res) => {
  const SSR_CONTENT = renderToString(<div>hello world</div>);

  res.send(`
    <html>
      <header>...</header>
      <body>
        <div id="root">${SSR_CONTENT}</div>
      </body>
    </html>
  `);
});

Client

import { render } from "@unis/dom";

render(
  <App />,
  document.querySelector("#root"),
  true // true means using hydration to render and reuse the server-side rendered content.
);

Todo Project

See complete project at

API

  • Core

    • h
    • h2 (for jsx2)
    • Fragment
    • createPortal
    • createContext
    • render
    • memo
  • Hooks

    • use
    • useProps
    • useState
    • useReducer
    • useContext
    • useMemo
    • useEffect
    • useRef
    • useId

License

MIT @anuoua

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Unis is a new front-end framework. Its innovative compilation strategy and component API built help you create web UI more easily.

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