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GitHub - emadalam/atvjs: Blazing fast Apple TV application development using pure JavaScript
Blazing fast Apple TV application development using pure JavaScript - emadalam/atvjs
Visit SiteGitHub - emadalam/atvjs: Blazing fast Apple TV application development using pure JavaScript
Blazing fast Apple TV application development using pure JavaScript - emadalam/atvjs
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atvjs
Blazing fast Apple TV application development using pure JavaScript.
- Philosophy
- What's included
- Getting Started
- Basic Examples
- Advanced Topics
- Sample Code
- Useful Links
- Contributions
- License
Philosophy
What?
This is a super simple framework for blazing fast Apple TV application development using pure JavaScript. It relies on the tvOS provided TVML and TVJS for Apple TV development. However this framework does most of the heavy lifting for you and lets you concentrate on your application logic without worrying about the hassles of complicated architecture for Apple TV development. Build your Apple TV application the same way how you are used to building your SPA applications in JavaScript and let the framework handle the rest for you.
Why?
The existing application architecture and sample code provided by apple for building the Apple TV applications using TVML and TVJS appears to be very immature (no offense Apple) and feels more like the web applications of the 90s where each of the page loads separately by sending the request to the back-end which generates your application page markup based on the user interaction and sends the new page back to the browser. This is okay if we were still in the 90s but feels so dumb in this era where we are used to building SPAs with REST APIs and back-end is used just as a data interaction point. Here comes atvjs that bridges the gap and lets you use the same architecture that, we as front-end developers, have embraced over the years.
How?
You simply create your pages (views) by passing a bunch of configurations (name of the page, template function, url etc) with your desired data (you can either populate data manually using your own ajax requests or pass a url configuration to fetch data from your server). Once the page is created, it is uniquely identifiable using the name. You can navigate to your page anytime in your application using the same name.
What's included
- Page, Menu and Modal Creation and Navigation
ATV.Page.create
,ATV.Menu.create
,ATV.Navigation.navigate
,ATV.Navigation.navigateToMenuPage
,ATV.Navigation.presentModal
- TVML styling capabilities (both global as well as individual page level)
- Event handling (both global and for individual pages and elements)
- Application level persistent data storage using localStorage with lz-string compression
ATV.Settings.set
,ATV.Settings.get
,ATV.Settings.remove
- Ajax library using JavaScript Promises
ATV.Ajax
,ATV.Ajax.get
,ATV.Ajax.post
,ATV.Ajax.put
,ATV.Ajax.del
- Application level publish/subscribe using PubSubJS
ATV.subscribe
,ATV.publish
,ATV.unsubscribe
- Application initialization/reload using simple configurations
ATV.start
,ATV.reload
- Global error handling
- JavaScript
Promise
and other ES6 Features Polyfill using babel - lodash library as
ATV._
Getting Started
atvjs
is defined as a UMD
and available as an npm package. You can either import it as a dependency or download it independently and include in your project.
$ npm install --save atvjs
You'll then be able to use it as a dependency with your favorite module system.
import ATV from 'atvjs';
// or
var ATV = require('atvjs');
Or if you have downloaded a copy of atvjs
, pull the script inside your application after launch.
function onEvaluate(success) {
if (!success) {
// application failed to load
}
}
App.onLaunch = function(options) {
var baseurl = options.BASEURL;
App.launchOptions = options;
evaluateScripts([`${baseurl}atv.min.js`, `${baseurl}app.js`], onEvaluate);
};
// then in your app.js you will have the instance of ATV library available
// you can contain your entire application code inside app.js
Basic Examples
Creating Pages
Create pages in your application using the page factory. You will then be able to navigate to these pages using the name of the page.
ATV.Page.create({
name: 'home',
// use a template function from your favourite templating engine
// or pass a raw template function
template(data) {
return `<document>
<alertTemplate>
<title>${data.title}</title>
<description>${data.description}</description>
</alertTemplate>
</document>`;
},
// pass some raw data to be applied
// or a data function that returns the data
data: {
title: 'Homepage',
description: 'This is my super awesome homepage created using atvjs.'
}
});
// later in your application you can do something like below to navigate to the page
ATV.Navigation.navigate('home');
Adding TVML styles to your page
You need to define your TVML styles as string and pass that as a configuration to your page. It will automatically be added to your page document in the runtime when your page is being navigated.
let myPageStyles = `
.text-bold {
font-weight: bold;
}
.text-white {
color: rgb(255, 255, 255);
}
`;
ATV.Page.create({
name: 'home',
style: myPageStyles,
template: your_template_function,
data: your_data
});
Fetching data from a remote source
You can fetch JSON
content from the remote api by setting the url
configuration. The data will be fetched using ajax and will be applied to the provided template. You can even run some transformations on the data before applying it to the template
ATV.Page.create({
name: 'home',
url: 'path/to/your/api/that/returns/json',
template: your_template_function
});
// or you can transform the response before applying to your template
ATV.Page.create({
name: 'home',
url: 'path/to/your/api/that/returns/json',
template: your_template_function,
data(response) {
// transform your response before applying to your template
let transformedData = someTransformationOfResponse(response);
return transformedData;
}
});
Creating links to other pages
You can setup links to other pages directly in your TVML markup by setting the data-href-page
attribute with the value of your page name that you want to link to. The framework will take care of the navigation for you. You can also pass options to your page (see topic Custom options while navigation for details) by setting up the data-href-page-options
attribute with a JSON value.
<document>
<alertTemplate>
<title>Example for creating links to other pages</title>
<description>Select an option</description>
<button data-href-page="homepage">
<text>Go To Homepage</text>
</button>
<button data-href-page="login" data-href-page-options='{"username": "emadalam", "password": "123456"}'>
<text>Login</text>
</button>
</alertTemplate>
</document>
Advanced Topics
Event Handling
You can define the list of events and their respective handlers as key-value pairs. The handler will be invoked in the current object context and you can access all the methods and properties that exist on the object.
ATV.Page.create({
name: 'mypage',
template: your_template_function,
data: your_data,
events: {
select: 'onSelect',
highlight: 'onHighlight'
},
// method invoked in the scope of the current object and
// 'this' will be bound to the object at runtime
// so you can easily access methods and properties and even modify them at runtime
onSelect(e) {
let element = e.target;
let someCheckForElementType = element.getAttribute('data-my-attribute');
let someOtherCheckForElementType = element.getAttribute('data-my-other-attribute');
if (someCheckForElementType) {
this.doSomethingOnElementType1();
}
if (someOtherCheckForElementType) {
this.doSomethingOnElementType2();
}
},
onHighlight(e) {
// same as above
},
doSomethingOnElementType1() {
// some awesome action
},
doSomethingOnElementType2() {
// some other awesome action
}
});
Custom options while navigation
You can pass your application state/logic to make reusable dynamic pages that renders a new page each time the navigation is performed. This can be achieved by setting a ready
method in the configuration that accepts 3 parameters, options
, resolve
and reject
. These parameters are automatically passed to the ready method whenever a navigation to this page is performed. The navigation relies on JavaScript Promises, so you'll have to call resolve/reject method after performing your logic.
ATV.Page.create({
name: 'login',
template: your_template_function,
// the ready method is called each time the navigation to this page is performed and
// the options object is passed to the method at runtime
// use options to pass any dynamic state of your application
// you can then use this state and populate your data (either using custom ajax or some other logic)
// once the data is populated, call the resolve method with the data or reject method for failure
ready(options, resolve, reject) {
let data = {
username: options.username,
password: options.password
};
// perform ajax to get the data
// the ajax method in the library returns an instance of the Promise object
ATV
.Ajax
.post('someURL', {data: data})
.then((xhr) => {
// xhr succeeded
let response = xhr.response;
// call resolve with the data that will be applied to the template
// you can even call resolve with false to skip navigation
resolve({
name: response.name,
message: response.message
});
}, (xhr) => {
// xhr failed
let response = xhr.response;
reject({
status: xhr.status,
message: response.message
});
});
}
});
// later in your application
ATV.Navigation.navigate('login', {username: 'emadalam', password: '123456'});
Creating Menu Page
The way menu template is designed in TVJS, you need to first create a menu template with your list of menu items. You then need to create individual documents and set one for each of the menu item. The resultant menu template then needs to be parsed and converted into a document which you can push on the navigation stack. Sounds fancy? NO WAYS! Here comes atvjs for your rescue. All you need is a menu configuration with your items list and the pages that you want to associate. The rest will be taken care by the framework. You can then navigate to the menu page using the provided navigation method. SWEET!
Note: Menu page is singleton, meaning you cannot create multiple menu pages. It seems logical, as an application at any given state, will have a single menu listing in its entire lifespan.
// create your pages
let SearchPage = ATV.Page.create({/* page configurations */});
let HomePage = ATV.Page.create({/* page configurations */});
let MoviesPage = ATV.Page.create({/* page configurations */});
let TVShowsPage = ATV.Page.create({/* page configurations */});
// create menu page
ATV.Menu.create({
// any attributes that you want to set on the menuBar element of TVML
attributes: {},
// any attributes that you want to set on the root level menuBarTemplate element of TVML
rootTemplateAttributes {},
// array of menu item configurations
items: [{
id: 'search',
name: 'Search',
page: SearchPage
}, {
id: 'homepage',
name: 'Home',
page: HomePage,
attributes: {
autoHighlight: true, // auto highlight on navigate
reloadOnSelect: true // reloads page when selecting it, instead of loading from cache
}
}, {
id: 'movies',
name: 'Movies',
page: MoviesPage
}, {
id: 'tvshows',
name: 'TV Shows',
page: TVShowsPage
}]
});
// later in your application
ATV.Navigation.navigateToMenuPage();
Application initialization using configuration
You can easily initialize your application by passing all the configurations at once.
// create your pages
let SearchPage = ATV.Page.create({/* page configurations */});
let HomePage = ATV.Page.create({/* page configurations */});
let MoviesPage = ATV.Page.create({/* page configurations */});
let TVShowsPage = ATV.Page.create({/* page configurations */});
let LoginPage = ATV.Page.create({/* page configurations */});
// template functions
const loaderTpl = (data) => `<document>
<loadingTemplate>
<activityIndicator>
<title>${data.message}</title>
</activityIndicator>
</loadingTemplate>
</document>`;
const errorTpl = (data) => `<document>
<descriptiveAlertTemplate>
<title>${data.title}</title>
<description>${data.message}</description>
</descriptiveAlertTemplate>
</document>`;
// Global TVML styles
let globalStyles = `
.text-bold {
font-weight: bold;
}
.text-white {
color: rgb(255, 255, 255);
}
.dark-background-color {
background-color: #091a2a;
}
.button {
background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1);
tv-tint-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1);
}
`;
// start your application by passing configurations
ATV.start({
style: globalStyles,
menu: {
attributes: {},
items: [{
id: 'search',
name: 'Search',
page: SearchPage
}, {
id: 'homepage',
name: 'Home',
page: HomePage,
attributes: {
autoHighlight: true // auto highlight on navigate
}
}, {
id: 'movies',
name: 'Movies',
page: MoviesPage
}, {
id: 'tvshows',
name: 'TV Shows',
page: TVShowsPage
}]
},
templates: {
// loader template
loader: loaderTpl,
// global error template
error: errorTpl,
// xhr status based error messages
status: {
'404': () => errorTpl({
title: '404',
message: 'The given page was not found'
}),
'500': () => errorTpl({
title: '500',
message: 'An unknown error occurred, please try again later!'
})
}
},
// global event handlers that will be called for each of the pages
handlers: {
select: {
globalSelecthandler(e) {
let element = e.target;
let someElementTypeCheck = element.getAttribute('data-my-attribute');
if (elementTypeCheck) {
// perform action
}
}
}
},
onLaunch(options) {
// navigate to menu page
ATV.Navigation.navigateToMenuPage();
// or you can navigate to previously created page
// ATV.Navigation.navigate('login');
}
});
Sample Code
- Movie Catalog (using open TMDb API)
- TVJS App Boilerplate
- Apple's TVML Catalog sample code re-written using atvjs.
Useful Links
- Apple TV Development - tvOS, TVJS and TVML
- Building tvOS Applications - Tutorial 1 and Tutorial 2
- JavaScript Promises
- ES6 Features
- Babel
Contributions
- Fork the project
- Commit your enhancements and bug fixes
- Create a pull request describing the changes
License
atvjs is released under the MIT License.
JavaScript Resources
are all listed below.
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