48851c9d25
* Adds support for a Lit renderer This adds `@astrojs/renderer-lit`. An experimental Lit renderer. * Removed cached submodule, mistake * Prevent globals clobbering * Add docs on globals |
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client-shim.js | ||
index.js | ||
package.json | ||
readme.md | ||
server-shim.js | ||
server.js |
Astro Lit Renderer
This is a plugin for Astro apps that enables server-side rendering of custom elements build with Lit.
Server-side rendering uses Declarative Shadow DOM, a new web technology that allows custom elements to be rendered to HTML with 0 JavaScript.
Installation
Install @astrojs/renderer-lit
and then add it to your astro.config.mjs
in the renderers
property:
npm install @astrojs/renderer-lit
astro.config.mjs
export default {
// ...
renderers: [
// ...
'@astrojs/renderer-lit'
]
}
Usage
If you're familiar with Astro then you already know that you can import components into your templates and use them. What's different about custom elements is you can use the tag name directly.
Astro needs to know which tag is associated with which component script. We expose this through exporting a tagName
variable from the component script. It looks like this:
src/components/my-element.js
import { LitElement, html } from 'lit';
export const tagName = 'my-counter';
class Counter extends LitElement {
}
customElements.define(tagName, Counter);
Note that exporting the
tagName
is required if you want to use the tag name in your templates. Otherwise you can export and use the constructor, like with non custom element frameworks.
In your Astro template import this component as a side-effect and use the element.
src/pages/index.astro
---
import '../components/my-element.js';
---
<my-element></my-element>
Note that Lit requires browser globals such as
HTMLElement
andcustomElements
to be present. For this reason the Lit renderer shims the server with these globals so Lit can run. You might run into libraries that work incorrectly because of this.
Polyfills & Hydration
The renderer automatically handles adding appropriate polyfills for support in browsers that don't have Declarative Shadow DOM. The polyfill is about 1.5kB. If the browser does support Declarative Shadow DOM then less than 250 bytes are loaded (to feature detect support).
Hydration is also handled automatically. You can use the same hydration directives such as client:load
, client:idle
and client:visible
as you can with other libraries that Astro supports.
---
import '../components/my-element.js';
---
<my-element client:visible />
The above will only load the element's JavaScript when the user has scrolled it into view. Since it is server rendered they will not see any jank; it will load and hydrate transparently.