Pjax enables fast and easy AJAX navigation on any website using pushState
and fetch
. No more full page reloads, no more multiple HTTP request, and written entirely in TypeScript.
Download Pjax via NPM:
npm i --save @pageworks/pjax
Once the package is installed import the package:
import Pjax from '@pageworks/pjax';
Then it's as simple as starting a new instance:
new Pjax();
Pjax loads pages using the Fetch API and updates the browser's current URL using a window.pushState()
all without reloading the page's layout or any resources (JavaScript, CSS, etc). Pjax listens for the onmouseenter
event for links and prefetches the pages HTML. Dpending on what the user does determines Pjax's response. If the user clicks the link before the server responds Pjax will notice that the user wants the page and will switch out the content as soon as the server responds. Finally, if the user remains hovered and the server has already responded Pjax will cache the new pages HTML content and will wait until the user clicks the link or triggers the onmouseleave
event causing Pjax to clear the cached HTML. When combining prefetching and the ability to swap out content without causing a full page reload results in very fast page load responses.
Under the hood Pjax is one HTTP request with a window.pushState()
.
- Multiple container support
- Fully supports browser history (window popstates)
- Automagically falls back to standard navigation for external pages
- Automagically falls back to standard navigation for internal pages that do not have an appropriate DOM tree
- Allows for modern CSS page transitions (animation) easily
- Is very lightweight
- Pjax attempts to prefetch internal links for the fastest possible load time
- Pjax renders new pages without reloading resources such as images, CSS, JavaScript, etc...
- Checks that all defined parts can be replaced:
- If the page doesn't meet the requirements Pjax will do nothing and standard navigation is used
- If the page meets requirements Pjax swaps the DOM elements
- Pjax updates the browser's current URL using
pushState()
Start by setting up the basic index.html
file for your website.
<!doctype <!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8" />
<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge">
<title>Index | Pjax Testing</title>
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
</head>
<body>
<a href="index">Home</a>
<main class="js-pjax-wrapper">
<article class="js-pjax">
<h1>Index Page</h1>
<ul>
<li><a href="index">Index</a></li>
<li><a href="page-1">Page 1</a></li>
</ul>
</article>
</main>
<script src="main.js"></script>
</body>
</html>
In the main/application script for your project you can being using Pjax with the following:
import Pjax from '@pageworks/pjax';
const pjax = new Pjax({
debug: true
});
You can define custom Pjax options using the following:
Option | Type | Default |
---|---|---|
elements | string | a[href] |
selectors | string[] | .js-pjax |
history | boolean | true |
cacheBust | boolean | false |
debug | boolean | false |
titleSwitch | boolean | true |
customTransitions | boolean | false |
customPreventionAttributes | string[] | [] |
importScripts | boolean | true |
importCSS | boolean | true |
scriptImportLocation | HTMLElement | document.head |
requireCssBeforeComplete | boolean | false |
elements
is the base element users should click on to trigger a page transition.
selectors
is an array of containers that Pjax should swap.
When history
is true Pjax will use window.history.pushState()
to manipulate the browsers history.
cacheBust
will add a GET
param to all request forcing the browser to perform the request instead of using a cached version of the page.
debug
will tell Pjax to display all debug information.
titleSwitch
when true will swap out the documents title during page transitions.
customTransitions
when true Pjax won't actually switch out the content until the developers application sends a custom pjax:continue
event.
customPreventionAttributes
is an array of custom element attributes that Pjax will look for when attaching event listeners. The default prevention attribute that is prevent-pjax
however you can define additional attributes. For example, if you are using a custom lightcase modal libary you could tell Pjax not to hijack the events attached to any element that has a valid href
attribute when the element also has a lightcase
attribute.
When importScripts
is true
Pjax will dynamically fetch and append all <script>
elements. Elements with a valid src
will be appended once, elements that contain JavaScript will be re-appended every time.
When importCSS
is true
Pjax will dynamically fetch and append custom <style>
elements to the documents <head>
. Only <link>
elements labeled as rel="stylesheet"
with a valid href
attribute will be appended. Custom styles will only be appended once.
scriptImportLocation
is the HTMLElement
that the dynamically fetched <script>
elements will be appended upon. Defaults to document.head
.
When requireCssBeforeComplete
is true
Pjax will delay firing the pjax:complete
event until all the CSS fetch request have been resolved.
Pjax fires a handful of events on the document
that you can listen for.
document.addEventListener('pjax:error', ()=>{ console.log('Event: pjax:error'); });
document.addEventListener('pjax:send', (e)=>{ console.log('Event: pjax:send', e); });
document.addEventListener('pjax:prefetch', ()=>{ console.log('Event: pjax:prefetch'); });
document.addEventListener('pjax:cancel', ()=>{ console.log('Event: pjax:cancel'); });
document.addEventListener('pjax:complete', ()=>{ console.log('Event: pjax:complete'); });
document.addEventListener('pjax:scriptContentLoaded', ()=>{ console.log('Event: pjax:scriptContentLoaded'); });
Pjax listens for a pjax:continue
event on the document
. This is only used when the customTransitions
option is set to true
. Pjax will NOT swap content until it receives this event.
The pjax:scriptContentLoaded
will fire on the document
when all the new scripts have been fetched and appended to the body.
Pjax sets two custom status classes on the document
element that you can use in your CSS to style your page transitions. In the example below we set all elements to use the wait
cursor while the dom-is-loading
class is set. Once the pjax:complete
or pjax:error
events fire the dom-is-loading
class is removed and the dom-is-loaded
class is applied.
HTML.dom-is-loading *
{
cursor: wait !important;
}
Pjax allows developers to manually trigger a page load by using the public static method Pjax.load(url)