high power tools for HTML
htmx allows you to access AJAX, CSS Transitions, WebSockets and Server Sent Events directly in HTML, using attributes, so you can build modern user interfaces with the simplicity and power of hypertext
htmx is small (~14k min.gz'd), dependency-free, extendable & IE11 compatible
- Why should only
<a>
and<form>
be able to make HTTP requests? - Why should only
click
&submit
events trigger them? - Why should only GET & POST be available?
- Why should you only be able to replace the entire screen?
By removing these arbitrary constraints htmx completes HTML as a hypertext
<script src="https://unpkg.com/htmx.org@1.9.10"></script>
<!-- have a button POST a click via AJAX -->
<button hx-post="/clicked" hx-swap="outerHTML">
Click Me
</button>
The hx-post
and hx-swap
attributes tell htmx:
"When a user clicks on this button, issue an AJAX request to /clicked, and replace the entire button with the response"
htmx is the successor to intercooler.js
To install using npm:
npm install htmx.org --save
Note there is an old broken package called htmx
. This is htmx.org
.
Want to contribute? Check out our contribution guidelines
No time? Then become a sponsor
To develop htmx locally, you will need to install the development dependencies.
Requires Node 15.
Run:
npm install
Then, run a web server in the root.
This is easiest with:
npx serve
You can then run the test suite by navigating to:
At this point you can modify /src/htmx.js
to add features, and then add tests in the appropriate area under /test
.
/test/index.html
- the root test page from which all other tests are included/test/attributes
- attribute specific tests/test/core
- core functionality tests/test/core/regressions.js
- regression tests/test/ext
- extension tests/test/manual
- manual tests that cannot be automated
htmx uses the mocha testing framework, the chai assertion framework and sinon to mock out AJAX requests. They are all OK.
You can also run live tests and demo of the WebSockets and Server-Side Events extensions with npm run ws-tests
javascript fatigue:
longing for a hypertext
already in hand