python3 -m pip install domonic
# python3 -m pip install domonic --upgrade
from domonic.html import *
print(html(body(h1('Hello, World!'))))
# <html><body><h1>Hello, World!</h1></body></html>
or to pretty format and insert the doctype, use an f-string:
mydom = html(body(h1('Hello, World!'), a("somelink", _href="somepage.html")))
print(f"{mydom}")
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<body>
<h1>Hello, World!</h1>
<a href="somepage.html">somelink</a>
</body>
</html>
Basic useage...
from domonic import domonic
mydom = domonic.parseString('<somehtml...')
To quickly parse a webapge try the window module...
from domonic.window import window
window.location = "http://www.google.com"
print(window.document.title)
Also try the xpath or css selectors on command line...
domonic -x https://google.com '//a' | uniq | sort
- html : Generate html with python 3 😎
- dom : DOM API in python 3 😲
- javascript : js API in python 3 😳 + (dQuery, d3)
- JSON : utils for loading / decorating / transforming
- SVG || mathml || aframe || x3d tags - generators for popular tags
- terminal || cmd : call terminal commands with python3 😱
See the docs/code for more features...
or examples in the repo...
Use the tags packaage if you want a namespace. i.e.
import domonic.tags
print(domonic.tags.h1)
# or
import domonic.tags as tags
str(tags.div)
# or
import domonic.tags as html
print(html.span)
or just import what you need...
from domonic import div, span, input as myinput, html as root
prepend attributes with an underscore ( avoids clashing with python keywords )
test = label(_class='classname', _for="someinput")
print(test)
<label class="classname" for="someinput"></label>
domonic is a pure python dom whos tree is composed of objects. i.e
div()
# <domonic.html.div object at 0x106b0e6b0>
cast str() on any element to render it without formatting.
el = str(div())
print(el)
# <div></div>
There's also a render method that takes 2 parameters, some domonic and an optional output file.
page = div(span('Hello World'))
render(f"{page}", 'index.html') # notice use of f-string to pretty print the html
There's a few new rendering options. See DOMConfig.
from domonic.dom import DOMConfig
print(DOMConfig.GLOBAL_AUTOESCAPE) # Default False
print(DOMConfig.RENDER_OPTIONAL_CLOSING_TAGS) # Default True
print(DOMConfig.RENDER_OPTIONAL_CLOSING_SLASH) # Defaults True
print(DOMConfig.SPACE_BEFORE_OPTIONAL_CLOSING_SLASH) # Default False
DOM manipulation with python.
to create your own elements use the DOM API
from domonic.dom import *
site = html()
el = document.createElement('myelement')
site.appendChild(el)
print(site)
# <html><myelement></myelement></html>
There's an evolving DOM API. To learn more about the webAPI click here.
And check the code/docs to see what's currently been implemented.
mysite.querySelectorAll('button')
mysite.querySelectorAll("a[rel=nofollow]")
mysite.querySelectorAll("a[href='#services']")
mysite.querySelectorAll("a[href$='technology']")
mysite.querySelectorAll('.fa-twitter')
somelinks = mysite.querySelectorAll("a[href*='twitter']")
for l in somelinks:
print(l.href)
To use the DOM either reference your root 'html' node or import the dom modules global 'document'
# access the document via the html tag
mydom = html()
# mydom.getElementbyID...
# or by importing the document global
from domonic.dom import document
# document.createElement...
print(document)
There is a javascript package that mimics the js API:
from domonic.javascript import Math
print(Math.random())
from domonic.javascript import Array
myArr=Array(1,2,3)
print(myArr.splice(1))
# [2, 3]
from domonic.javascript import URL
url = URL('https://somesite.com/blog/article-one#some-hash')
print(url.protocol) # https
print(url.host) # somesite.com
print(url.pathname) # /blog/article-one
print(url.hash) # #some-hash
# Use Global class to import all the js methods from the global namespace i.e
# from domonic.javascript import Global
# Global.decodeURIComponent(...
# Global.encodeComponent(...
# Global.setInterval(...
# from domonic.javascript import Date, String, Number
# etc..
Use setInterval and clearInterval with params
from domonic.javascript import setInterval, clearInterval
x=0
def hi(inc):
global x
x = x+inc
print(x)
test = setInterval(hi, 1000, 2)
import time
time.sleep(5)
clearInterval(test)
print(f"Final value of x:{x}")
Or for a single delayed function call use setTimeout, clearTimeout
from domonic.javascript import setTimeout, clearTimeout
timeoutID = setTimeout(hi, 1000)
You can call ()
on a stringvar to transform it into a Node
from domonic.javascript import String
test = String("Hi there!")
test('div', _style="font-color:red;")
str(test('div', _style="font-color:red;"))
# <div style="font-color:red;">Hi there!</div>
a-tags inherit URL:
from domonic.html import *
atag = a(_href="https://somesite.com:8000/blog/article-one#some-hash")
print('href:', atag.href)
# href: https://somesite.com:8000/blog/article-one#some-hash
print('protocol:', atag.protocol)
# protocol: https:
print('port:', atag.port)
# port: 8000
atag.protocol = "http"
atag.port = 8983
print(atag)
# <a href="http://somesite.com:8983/blog/article-one#some-hash">
For writing and using regular javascript, load from a src...
script(_src="/docs/5.0/dist/js/bootstrap.bundle.min.js", _integrity="sha384-1234", _crossorigin="anonymous"),
# <script src="/docs/5.0/dist/js/bootstrap.bundle.min.js" integrity="sha384-1234" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
or do inline js by opening triple quotes...
script("""
let itbe = ""
"""),
Styling is supported. Styles get passed to the style tag on render...
mytag = div("hi", _id="test")
mytag.style.backgroundColor = "black"
mytag.style.fontSize = "12px"
print(mytag)
# <div id="test" style="background-color:black;font-size:12px;">hi</div>
To use css use a link tag as you usually would...
link(_href="styles.css", _rel="stylesheet"),
or use triple quotes to open style tag...
style("""
.placeholder-img {
-webkit-user-select: none;
-moz-user-select: none;
-ms-user-select: none;
user-select: none;
}
"""),
use decorators to wrap elements around function results
from domonic.decorators import el
@el(html, True)
@el(body)
@el(div)
def test():
return 'hi!'
print(test())
# <html><body><div>hi!</div></body></html>
# returns pyml objects so call str to render
assert str(test()) == '<html><body><div>hi!</div></body></html>'
It returns the tag object by default. You can pass True as a second param to the decorator to return a rendered string instead. Also accepts strings as first param i.e. custom tags.
python doesn't allow hyphens in parameter names. so use variable keyword argument syntax for custom data-tags
div("test", **{"_data-test":"test"} )
# <div data-test="test">test</div>
or for example a colon...
t = div( **{"_:test":"something"} )
str(t)
# <div :test="something"></div>
decorate any function that returns python objects to return json instead
from domonic.decorators import as_json
import domonic.JSON as JSON
@as_json
def somefunc():
myObj = {"hi":[1,2,3]}
return myObj
print( somefunc() )
# {"hi":[1,2,3]}
print( JSON.is_json(somefunc()) )
# True
convert json arrays into html tables...
import domonic.JSON as JSON
# i.e. containting flat json array of dicts... [{"id":"01","name": "some item"},{"id":"02","name": "some other item"}]
json_data = JSON.parse_file('somefile.json')
mytable = JSON.tablify(json_data)
print(mytable)
convert json arrays into csv files...
import domonic.JSON as JSON
json_data = JSON.parse_file('somefile.json')
JSON.csvify(json_data, 'data.csv')
convert csv files to json...
import domonic.JSON as JSON
json_data =JSON.csv2json("data.csv")
print(json_data)
more to come...
All tags extend 'Element'. So will have DOM and magic methods available to them. See the docs.
circ = svg(
circle(_cx="50", _cy="50", _r="40", _stroke="green", **{"_stroke-width": "4"}, _fill="yellow"),
_width="100", _height="100",
)
mysvg = svg()
mysvg.appendChild(circ / 10)
print(mysvg)
Tween values with the tween library:
from domonic.lerpy.easing import *
from domonic.lerpy.tween import *
someObj = {'x':0,'y':0,'z':0}
twn = Tween( someObj, { 'x':10, 'y':5, 'z':3 }, 6, Linear.easeIn )
twn.start()
3d tags can be used if you import the js
from domonic.html import *
from domonic.xml.aframe import *
from domonic.CDN import *
_scene = scene(
box(_position="-1 0.5 -3", _rotation="0 45 0", _color="#4CC3D9"),
sphere(_position="0 1.25 -5", _radius="1.25", _color="#EF2D5E"),
cylinder(_position="1 0.75 -3", _radius="0.5", _height="1.5", _color="#FFC65D"),
plane(_position="0 0 -4", _rotation="-90 0 0", _width="4", _height="4", _color="#7BC8A4"),
sky(_color="#ECECEC")
)
_webpage = html(head(),body(
script(_src=CDN_JS.AFRAME_1_2), # < NOTICE you need to import aframe to use it
str(_scene)
)
)
render( _webpage, 'hello.html' )
dQuery uses the º symbol (alt+0).
from domonic.html import *
from domonic.dQuery import º
d = html(head(body(li(_class='things'), div(_id="test"))))
print( º('#test') )
# <div id="test">
print( º('.things') )
# <li class="things">
mydiv = º('<div class="test2"></div>')
# <domonic.dQuery.o object at 0x107d5c9a0>
b = º('#test').append(mydiv)
print(b)
# <div id="test"><div class="test2"></div></div>
Only recently started so check to see what's implemented.
There is a command line package that can call bash/unix/posix and other apps on the command line:
This package only works on nix systems as it effectively just passes stuff off to subprocess.
from domonic.terminal import *
print(ls())
print(ls("-al"))
print(ls("../"))
print(pwd())
print(mkdir('somedir'))
print(touch('somefile'))
print(git('status'))
for file in ls( "-al" ):
print("Line : ", file)
for f in ls():
try:
print(f)
print(cat(f))
except Exception as e:
pass
for i, l in enumerate(cat('LICENSE.txt')):
print(i,l)
print(man("ls"))
print(echo('test'))
print(df())
print(du())
for thing in du():
print(thing)
print(find('.'))
# print(ping('eventual.technology'))# < TODO - need to strean output
print(cowsay('moo'))
# print(wget('eventual.technology'))
print(date())
print(cal())
or just run arbitrary commands...
from domonic.terminal import command
command.run("echo hi")
Take a look at the code in 'terminal.py' to see all the commands as there's loads. (Disclaimer: not all tested.)
Windows users can use now use cmd.
from domonic.cmd import *
print(dir())
print(dir("..\\"))
https://domonic.readthedocs.io/
Use the command line interface to help you out.
To view the online the docs:
domonic -h
To see the version:
domonic -v
To quickly create a domonic project for prototyping:
domonic -p myproject
To evaluate some domonic pyml:
domonic -e 'html(head(),body(div()))'
To use xpath on a website from the command line:
domonic -x https://google.com '//a'
To use css selectors on a website from the command line:
domonic -q https://google.com 'a'
Blueberry : A browser based file OS. Working example of how components can work.
ezcron : A cron viewer
bombdisposer : A basic game
htmlx : A low dependency lightweight (DOM only) version of domonic
Checkout the docs for more examples i.e. generating sitemaps or using domonic with server frameworks like flask, django, sanic, fastapi and others.
There's also several useage examples in the repo so pull and have a look.
Feel free to contribute if you find it useful. (I'd be grateful for help on all fronts)
Email me, message me directly if you like or create a discussion on here. Or join the discord.
If there are any methods you want that are missing or not complete yet or you think you can help make it better just update the code and send a pull request. I'll merge and releaese asap.
In the repo there's a requirements-dev.txt which is mostly the libs used in the examples.
requirements.txt are the libs used for packaging just the lib.
See also the CONTRIBUTING.md
. venv/bin/activate
pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
cd examples
python lifecalendar.py
There are tests used during dev. They are useful as code examples and to see what still needs doing.
See Makefile to run all tests:
make test # default tests ubuntu. so will fail on window when terminal test runs. comment out locally if that's the case
or to test a single function:
python -m unittest tests.test_javascript.TestCase.test_javascript_array
python -m unittest tests.test_dQuery.TestCase.test_addClass
python -m unittest tests.test_geom.TestCase.test_vec2
python3 -m unittest tests.test_cmd.TestCase.test_cmd_dir # only windows
or to test a whole module
python -m unittest tests.test_html
python -m unittest tests.test_CDN
to see coverage
coverage run -m unittest discover tests/
coverage report
or...
pip install pytest
pytest tests
There's several more widely supported libraries doing HTML generation, DOM reading/manipulation, terminal wrappers etc. Maybe use one of those for production due to strictness and support.
This is more of a fast prototyping library.