Welcome to bitwrench.js — a lightweight JavaScript library designed for rapid prototyping of web components with minimal dependencies. It allows developers to create HTML structures, style elements, and add event handlers using plain JavaScript objects or JSON, without relying on complex frameworks. bitwrench.js includes handy functions for generating placeholder content, manipulating colors, and handling random data generation, making it ideal for quick web demos or visualizing data, especially in constrained environments like embedded system projects.
Whether you're debugging embedded C/C++ projects or building lightweight web apps, bitwrench.js offers powerful, no-frills tools to help you work efficiently.
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Dynamic HTML Generation: Create complex HTML elements and structures directly from JSON objects, making it easy to dynamically generate web content.
- Example:
bw.html(["div", { class: "container", onclick: "myFunction(this)" }, "This is the content"]);
- Support for deep hierarchical structures and arrays.
- Select and modify DOM elements via CSS selectors:
bw.DOM("h3", "Updated content"); bw.DOM(".myClass", function(el) { /* apply actions */ });
- Function registration to bind JavaScript functions to HTML elements.
- Example:
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Color Manipulation: Convert between RGB, RGBA, HSL, and HSLA formats, and interpolate colors. Generate themed colors as both numerical values and CSS-compatible strings.
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Cookie Handling: Easily set and retrieve browser cookies.
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JSON Pretty Printing: Format and display JSON data for better readability.
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File Handling (Node and Browser): Save and load files as raw data or JSON objects. Useful for quick local storage of application data.
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URL Parameter Handling: Parse URL query parameters with defaults. This also works for command-line scripts, and you can pack dictionaries back into URLs.
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Random Data Functions: Generate random numbers within a range, including multidimensional arrays of random values for use in data visualization or testing.
- Example:
bw.random(4, 11); // returns a random number between 4 and 11
- Example:
-
Logging Utility: A simple logging system with timestamping, message formatting, and pretty-printing options for raw, HTML, or text-based output. Includes auto-dissolve functionality to streamline logs in production environments.
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Self-Documenting Code: Extract function documentation at runtime using
bw.docString("functionName")
to get docstrings for specific functions. -
Browser Compatibility: Designed to work in older browsers (e.g., Internet Explorer 7 and later). The generated content is fully compatible with legacy environments where modern frameworks may not be usable.
You can install bitwrench via npm:
npm install bitwrench --save
Use bitwrench in your Node.js applications as follows:
const bw = require('bitwrench');
const htmlContent = bw.html(["div", { "class": "example" }, "Hello, bitwrench!"]);
// htmlContent will contain: <div class='example'>Hello, bitwrench!</div>
In the browser, include bitwrench.js like any standard script library:
<script src="path/to/bitwrench.js"></script>
Bitwrench generates default CSS from JavaScript, though you can also include bitwrench.css
separately if needed. Here’s a simple example:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<script src="bitwrench.js"></script>
</head>
<body class="bw-def-page-setup bw-font-sans-serif">
<script>
const htmlData = [
["h1", { class: "bw-h1" }, "Welcome to Bitwrench"],
["div", { class: "content" }, "This content is generated using bitwrench.js."]
];
bw.DOMInsertElement("body", bw.html(htmlData), true);
</script>
</body>
</html>
- HTML Components: Create and manipulate HTML components entirely from JSON-like objects.
- Lorem Ipsum Generator: Generate placeholder text for layouts and prototypes.
- Color Interpolation: Dynamically generate gradients or theme-based color schemes.
- Sortable Tables: Quickly generate sortable tables from JSON data.
bw.htmlTable([ ["Name", "Age", "Profession", "Favorite Color"], ["Alice", 30, "Engineer", { a: { style: "color: red" }, c: "red" }], ["Bob", 35, "Teacher", { a: { style: "color: green" }, c: "green" }] ], { sortable: true });
To ensure the library works as expected, bitwrench uses the Mocha framework with Chai for assertions. Install the test dependencies:
npm install mocha --save-dev
npm install chai --save-dev
Run the tests:
npm run test
Bitwrench uses ESLint for static code analysis. Install the linting dependencies and initialize ESLint:
npm install eslint --save-dev
./node_modules/.bin/eslint --init
Then, run the lint tests:
npm run lint
- 1.2.x: Initial release
bitwrench is licensed under the OSI-approved BSD 2-Clause License. For more details, refer to the LICENSE.txt
file in the repository.
Explore the full source code on GitHub: bitwrench on GitHub