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An opinionated way to work with html in pure python with htmx support.

Project description

Hypermedia

Hypermedia is a pure python library for working with HTML. Hypermedia's killer feature is that it is composable through a slot concept. Because of that, it works great with </> htmx where you need to respond with both partials and full page html.

Hypermedia is made to work with FastAPI and </> htmx, but can be used by anything to create HTML.

Features

  • Build HTML with python classes
  • Composable templates through a slot system
  • Seamless integration with </> htmx
  • Fully typed and Autocompletion for html/htmx attributes and styles
  • Opinionated simple decorator for FastAPI
  • Unlike other template engines like Jinja2 we have full typing since we never leave python land.

The Basics

All html tags can be imported directly like:

from hypermedia import Html, Body, Div, A

Tags are nested by adding children in the constructor:

from hypermedia import Html, Body, Div

Html(Body(Div(), Div()))

Add text to your tag:

from hypermedia import Div

Div("Hello world!")

use .dump() to dump your code to html.

from hypermedia import Bold, Div

Div("Hello ", Bold("world!")).dump()

# outputs
# '<div>Hello <b>world!</b></div>'

Composability with slots

from hypermedia import Html, Body, Div, Menu, Header, Div, Ul, Li

base = Html(
    Body(
        Menu(slot="menu"),
        Header("my header", slot="header"),
        Div(slot="content"),
    ),
)

menu = Ul(Li(text="main"))
content = Div(text="Some content")

base.extend("menu", menu)
base.extend("content", content)

base.dump()

# outputs
# '<html><body><menu><ul><li>main</li></ul></menu><header>my header</header><div><div>Some content</div></div></body></html>'

Attribute names with special characters

Most html and </>htmx attributes are typed and has Aliases where needed. That means that most of the time you won't have to think about this and it should just work.

The attribute name output rules are:

  1. Any attribute that does not have an Alias will have any underscores (_) changed to hyphens (-).
  2. Any attribute that is prefixed with $ will be outputted as is without the first $.

ie

# Is a specified attribute(typed) with an Alias:
Div(on_afterprint="test")  # <div onafterprint='test'></div>

# Unspecified attribute without Alias:
Div(data_test="test")  # <div data-test='test'></div>

# Spread without $ prefix gets its underscores changed to hyphens:
Div(**{"funky-format_test.value": True})  # <div funky-format-test.value></div>

# Spread with $ prefix
Div(**{"$funky-format_test.value": True})  # <div funky-format_test.value></div>
Div(**{"$funky-format_test.value": "name"})  # <div funky-format_test.value='name'></div>

Note: About the </> HTMX attributes. The documentation specifies that all hx attributes can be written with all dashes. Because of that Hypermedia lets users write hx attributes with underscores and Hypermedia changes them to dashes for you.

Div(hx_on_click='alert("Making a request!")')
# <div hx-on-click='alert("Making a request!")'></div>
# Which is equivalent to:
# <div hx-on:click='alert("Making a request!"'></div>

Div(hx_on_htmx_before_request='alert("Making a request!")')
# <div hx-on-htmx-before-request='alert("Making a request!")'></div>

# shorthand version of above statement
Div(hx_on__before_request='alert("Making a request!")')
# <div hx-on--before-request='alert("Making a request!")'></div>

HTMX

The Concept

The core concept of HTMX is that the server responds with HTML, and that we can choose with a CSS selector which part of the page will be updated with the HTML response from the server.

This means that we want to return snippets of HTML, or partials, as they are also called.

The Problem

The problem is that we need to differentiate if it's HTMX that called an endpoint for a partial, or if the user just navigated to it and needs the whole page back in the response.

The Solution

HTMX provides an HX-Request header that is always true. We can check for this header to know if it's an HTMX request or not.

We've chosen to implement that check in a @htmx decorator. The decorator expects partial and optionally full arguments in the endpoint definition. These must be resolved by FastAPI's dependency injection system.

from hypermedia.fastapi import htmx, full

The partial argument is a function that returns the partial HTML. The full argument is a function that needs to return the whole HTML, for example on first navigation or a refresh.

Note: The full argument needs to be wrapped in Depends so that the full function's dependencies are resolved! Hypermedia ships a full wrapper, which is basically just making the function lazily loaded. The full wrapper must be used, and the @htmx decorator will call the lazily wrapped function to get the full HTML page when needed.

Note: The following code is in FastAPI, but could have been anything. As long as you check for HX-Request and return partial/full depending on if it exists or not.

def render_base():
    """Return base HTML, used by all full renderers."""
    return ElementList(Doctype(), Body(slot="body"))


def render_fruits_partial():
    """Return partial HTML."""
    return Div(Ul(Li("Apple"), Li("Banana"), Button("reload", hx_get="/fruits")))


def render_fruits():
    """Return base HTML extended with `render_fruits_partial`."""
    return render_base().extend("body", render_fruits_partial())


@router.get("/fruits", response_class=HTMLResponse)
@htmx
async def fruits(
    request: Request,
    partial: Element = Depends(render_fruits_partial),
    full: Element = Depends(full(render_fruits)),
) -> None:
    """Return the fruits page, partial or full."""
    pass

That's it. Now we have separated the rendering from the endpoint definition and handled returning partials and full pages when needed. Doing a full refresh will render the whole page. Clicking the button will make a htmx request and only return the partial.

What is so cool about this is that it works so well with FastAPI's dependency injection.

Really making use of dependency injection

fruits = {1: "apple", 2: "orange"}

def get_fruit(fruit_id: int = Path(...)) -> str:
    """Get fruit ID from path and return the fruit."""
    return fruits[fruit_id]

def render_fruit_partial(
    fruit: str = Depends(get_fruit),
) -> Element:
    """Return partial HTML."""
    return Div(fruit)

def render_fruit(
    partial: Element = Depends(render_fruit_partial),
):
    return render_base().extend("content", partial)

@router.get("/fruits/{fruit_id}", response_class=HTMLResponse)
@htmx
async def fruit(
    request: Request,
    partial: Element = Depends(render_fruit_partial),
    full: Element = Depends(full(render_fruit)),
) -> None:
    """Return the fruit page, partial or full."""
    pass

Here we do basically the same as the previous example, except that we make use of FastAPI's great dependency injection system. Notice the path of our endpoint has fruit_id. This is not used in the definition. However, if we look at our partial renderer, it depends on get_fruit, which is a function that uses FastAPI's Path resolver. The DI then resolves (basically calls) the fruit function, passes the result into our partial function, and we can use it as a value!

This pattern with DI, Partials, and full renderers is what makes using FastAPI with HTMX worth it.

In addition to this, one thing many are concerned about with HTMX is that since we serve HTML, there will be no way for another app/consumer to get a fruit in JSON. But the solution is simple:

Because we already have a dependency that retrieves the fruit, we just need to add a new endpoint:

@router.get("/api/fruit/{fruit_id}")
async def fruit(
    request: Request,
    fruit: str = Depends(get_fruit),
) -> str:
    """Return the fruit data."""
    return fruit

Notice we added /api/ and just used DI to resolve the fruit and just returned it. Nice!

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