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Tribute

CDNJS version Build Status

A cross-browser @mention engine written in ES6, no dependencies. Tested in Firefox, Chrome, iOS Safari, Safari, IE 9+, Edge 12+, Android 4+, and Windows Phone.

Installing

There are a few ways to install Tribute; Bower, as an NPM Module, or by downloading from the dist folder in this repo.

Bower

Bower is a great way to manage your JS dependencies. You can install Tribute by running the following command:

bower install tribute

You can then link to Tribute in your code with the following markup:

<link rel="stylesheet" href="bower_components/tribute/dist/tribute.css" />
<script src="bower_components/tribute/dist/tribute.js"></script>

NPM Module

You can install Tribute by running:

npm install tributejs

Or by adding Tribute to your package.json file.

Import into your ES6 code.

import Tribute from "tributejs";

Ruby Gem

To use Tribute within a Rails project, you can add the following to the app's Gemfile:

gem 'tribute'

Then, add the following to app/assets/javascripts/application.js:

*= require tribute

And in app/assets/stylesheets/application.css:

//= require tribute

Webpack

To add Tribute to your webpack build process, start by adding it to your package.json and running npm install.

After installing, you need to update your Babel module loader to not exclude Tribute from being compiled by Webpack:

{
    test: /\.js$/,
    loader: 'babel',
    exclude: /node_modules\/(?!tributejs)/
}

Download or Clone

Or you can download the repo or clone it localy with this command:

git clone [email protected]:zurb/tribute.git

You can then copy the files in the dist directory to your project.

<link rel="stylesheet" href="js/tribute.css" />
<script src="js/tribute.js"></script>

That's it! Now you are ready to initialize Tribute.

Initializing

There are two ways to initialize Tribute, by passing an array of "collections" or by passing one collection object.

var tribute = new Tribute({
  values: [
    {key: 'Phil Heartman', value: 'pheartman'},
    {key: 'Gordon Ramsey', value: 'gramsey'}
  ]
})

You can pass multiple collections on initialization by passing in an array of collection objects to collection.

var tribute = new Tribute({
  collection: []
})

Attaching to elements

Once initialized, Tribute can be attached to an input, textarea, or an element that supports contenteditable.

<div id="caaanDo">I'm Mr. Meeseeks, look at me!</div>

<div class="mentionable">Some text here.</div>
<div class="mentionable">Some more text over here.</div>

<script>
  tribute.attach(document.getElementById('caaanDo'));

  // also works with NodeList
  tribute.attach(document.querySelectorAll('.mentionable'));
</script>

A Collection

Collections are configuration objects for Tribute, you can have multiple for each instance. This is useful for scenarios where you may want to match multiple trigger keys, such as @ for users and # for projects.

Collection object shown with defaults:

{
  // symbol that starts the lookup
  trigger: '@',

  // element to target for @mentions
  iframe: null,

  // class added in the flyout menu for active item
  selectClass: 'highlight',

  // function called on select that returns the content to insert
  selectTemplate: function (item) {
    return '@' + item.original.value;
  },

  // template for displaying item in menu
  menuItemTemplate: function (item) {
    return item.string;
  },

  // template for when no match is found (optional),
  // If no template is provided, menu is hidden.
  noMatchTemplate: null,

  // specify an alternative parent container for the menu
  menuContainer: document.body,

  // column to search against in the object (accepts function or string)
  lookup: 'key',

  // column that contains the content to insert by default
  fillAttr: 'value',

  // REQUIRED: array of objects to match
  values: [],

  // specify whether a space is required before the trigger character
  requireLeadingSpace: true,

  // specify whether a space is allowed in the middle of mentions
  allowSpaces: false,

  // optionally specify a custom suffix for the replace text
  // (defaults to empty space if undefined)
  replaceTextSuffix: '\n',

  // specify whether the menu should be positioned.  Set to false and use in conjuction with menuContainer to create an inline menu
  // (defaults to true)
  positionMenu: true,

  // when the spacebar is hit, select the current match
  spaceSelectsMatch: false,

  // turn tribute into an autocomplete
  autocompleteMode: false,

  // Customize the elements used to wrap matched strings within the results list
  // defaults to <span></span> if undefined
  searchOpts: {
    pre: '<span>',
    post: '</span>'
  }
}

Dynamic lookup column

The lookup column can also be passed a function to construct a string to query against. This is useful if your payload has multiple attributes that you would like to query against but you can't modify the payload returned from the server to include a concatenated lookup column.

{
  lookup: function (person, mentionText) {
    return person.name + person.email;
  }
}

Template Item

Both the selectTemplate and the menuItemTemplate have access to the item object. This is a meta object containing the matched object from your values collection, wrapped in a search result.

{
  index: 0
  original: {} // your original object from values array
  score: 5
  string: "<span>J</span><span>o</span>rdan Hum<span>p</span>hreys"
}

Trigger tribute programmatically

Tribute can be manually triggered by calling an instances showMenuForCollection method. This is great for trigging tribute on an input by clicking an anchor or button element.

<a id="activateInput">@mention</a>

Then you can bind a mousedown event to the anchor and call showMenuForCollection.

activateLink.addEventListener('mousedown', function (e) {
  e.preventDefault();
  var input = document.getElementById('test');

  tribute.showMenuForCollection(input);
});

Note that showMenuForCollection has an optional second parameter called collectionIndex that defaults to 0. This allows you to specify which collection you want to trigger with the first index starting at 0.

For example, if you want to trigger the second collection you would use the following snippet: tribute.showMenuForCollection(input, 1);

Events

Replaced

You can bind to the tribute-replaced event to know when we have updated your targeted Tribute element.

If your element has an ID of myElement:

document.getElementById('myElement').addEventListener('tribute-replaced', function (e) {
  console.log('Original event that triggered text replacement:', e.detail.event);
  console.log('Matched item:', e.detail.item);
});

No Match

You can bind to the tribute-no-match event to know when no match is found in your collection.

If your element has an ID of myElement:

document.getElementById('myElement').addEventListener('tribute-no-match', function (e) {
  console.log('No match found!');
});

Tips

Some useful approaches to common roadblocks when implementing @mentions.

Updating a collection with new data

You can update an instance of Tribute on the fly. If you have new data you want to insert into the current active collection you can access the collection values array directly:

tribute.appendCurrent([
  {name: 'Howard Johnson', occupation: 'Panda Wrangler', age: 27},
  {name: 'Fluffy Croutons', occupation: 'Crouton Fluffer', age: 32}
]);

This would update the first configuration object in the collection array with new values. You can access and update any attribute on the collection in this way.

You can also append new values to an arbitrary collection by passing an index to append.

tribute.append(2, [
  {name: 'Howard Johnson', occupation: 'Panda Wrangler', age: 27},
  {name: 'Fluffy Croutons', occupation: 'Crouton Fluffer', age: 32}
]);

This will append the new values to the third collection.

Programmatically detecting an active Tribute dropdown

If you need to know when Tribute is active you can access the isActive property of an instance.

if (tribute.isActive) {
  console.log('Somebody is being mentioned!');
} else {
  console.log("Who's this guy talking to?");
}

Links inside contenteditable are not clickable.

If you want to embed a link in your selectTemplate then you need to make sure that the anchor is wrapped in an element with contenteditable="false". This makes the anchor clickable and fixes issues with matches being modifiable.

var tribute = new Tribute({
  values: [
    {key: 'Jordan Humphreys', value: 'Jordan Humphreys', email: '[email protected]'},
    {key: 'Sir Walter Riley', value: 'Sir Walter Riley', email: '[email protected]'}
  ],
  selectTemplate: function (item) {
    return '<span contenteditable="false"><a href="http://zurb.com" target="_blank" title="' + item.original.email + '">' + item.original.value + '</a></span>';
  }
});

How do I add an image to the items in the list?

You can override the default menuItemTemplate with your own output on initialization. This allows you to replace the innerHTML of the li of each item in the list. You can use item.string to return the markup for the fuzzy match.

{
  //..other config options
  menuItemTemplate: function (item) {
    return '<img src="'+item.original.avatar_url + '">' + item.string;
  }
}

Embedding Tribute in a scrollable container.

Sometimes you may need to have the Tribute menu attach to a scrollable parent element so that if the user scrolls the container the menu will scroll with it. To do this, you can set menuContainer to the node that is the scrollable parent.

{
  //..other config options
  menuContainer: document.getElementById('wrapper')
}

Loading remote data

If your data set is large or would like to pre filter your data you can load dynamically by setting the values to a function.

{
  //..other config options
  // function retrieving an array of objects
  values: function (text, cb) {
    remoteSearch(text, users => cb(users));
  },
  lookup: 'name',
  fillAttr: 'name'
}

You would then define a function, in this case remoteSearch, that returns your data from the backend.

function remoteSearch(text, cb) {
  var URL = 'YOUR DATA ENDPOINT';
  xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
  xhr.onreadystatechange = function ()
  {
    if (xhr.readyState === 4) {
      if (xhr.status === 200) {
        var data = JSON.parse(xhr.responseText);
        cb(data);
      } else if (xhr.status === 403) {
        cb([]);
      }
    }
  };
  xhr.open("GET", URL + '?q=' + text, true);
  xhr.send();
}

Detaching Tribute instances

When you want to remove Tribute from an element you can call detach.

tribute.detach(document.getElementById('caaanDo'));

This will remove all event listeners from the DOM that are associated with that element.

Contributing

We welcome contributions to Tribute. There are many areas where we would love to see community contributions that we have outlined below, but first, let's go over how to develop in Tribute. We use Yarn to manage our NPM packages.

Install dependencies:

yarn install

Run gulp:

gulp

That's it! Now you can use the example/index.html to test out changes to the code base. All changes to src and scss will recompile on the fly.

Once you have made your changes, feel free to submit a pull request.

Testing

We use Karma and Jasmin as the testing framework.

To run the tests type:

yarn run build
yarn test

Framework Support

Vue.js — vue-tribute by @syropian

AngularJS 1.5+ — angular-tribute by ZURB

Angular 2+ - ngx-tribute by Ladder.io

Ruby — tribute-rb by ZURB

React – react-tribute by Bolste

Ember – ember-tribute by MalayaliRobz

WYSIWYG Editor Support

Contribution Ideas

The major focus that we could use your help with is creating wrappers for different JavaScript frameworks. Some of the ones we are interested in are outlined below. We also see a couple of areas for improving compatibility with different rendering situations, such as in iframes inside of rich text editors.

Some ideas that are for grabs

  • Prosemirror component
  • noMatchTemplate per collection.

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 89.1%
  • HTML 10.4%
  • CSS 0.5%