tiptap/docs/src/docPages/guide/extend-extensions.md
2021-03-08 18:33:32 +01:00

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Extend the functionality

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Introduction

One of the strength of tiptap is its extendability. You dont depend on the provided extensions, its intended to extend the editor to your liking. With custom extensions you can add new content types and new functionalities, on top of what already exists or from scratch.

Customize existing extensions

Lets say you want to change the keyboard shortcuts for the bullet list. You should start by looking at the source code of the BulletList extension and find the part you would like to change. In that case, the keyboard shortcut, and just that.

Every extension has an extend() method, which takes an object with everything you want to change or add to it. For the bespoken example, your code could like that:

// 1. Import the extension
import BulletList from '@tiptap/extension-bullet-list'

// 2. Overwrite the keyboard shortcuts
const CustomBulletList = BulletList.extend({
  addKeyboardShortcuts() {
    return {
      'Mod-l': () => this.editor.commands.toggleBulletList(),
    }
  },
})

// 3. Add the custom extension to your editor
new Editor({
  extensions: [
    CustomBulletList(),
    // …
  ],
})

The same applies to every aspect of an existing extension, except to the name. Lets look at all the things that you can change through the extend method. We focus on one aspect in every example, but you can combine all those examples and change multiple aspects in one extend() call too.

Name

The extension name is used in a whole lot of places and changing it isnt too easy. If you want to change the name of an existing extension, we would recommended to copy the whole extension and change the name in all occurrences.

The extension name is also part of the JSON. If you store your content as JSON, you need to change the name there too.

Settings

All settings can be configured through the extension anyway, but if you want to change the default settings, for example to provide a library on top of tiptap for other developers, you can do it like that:

import Heading from '@tiptap/extension-heading'

const CustomHeading = Heading.extend({
  defaultOptions: {
    levels: [1, 2, 3],
  },
})

Schema

tiptap works with a strict schema, which configures how the content can be structured, nested, how it behaves and many more things. You can change all aspects of the schema for existing extensions. Lets walk through a few common use cases.

The default Blockquote extension can wrap other nodes, like headings. If you want to allow nothing but paragraphs in your blockquotes, this is how you could achieve it:

// Blockquotes must only include paragraphs
import Blockquote from '@tiptap/extension-blockquote'

const CustomBlockquote = Blockquote.extend({
  content: 'paragraph*',
})

The schema even allows to make your nodes draggable, thats what the draggable option is for, which defaults to false.

// Draggable paragraphs
import Paragraph from '@tiptap/extension-paragraph'

const CustomParagraph = Paragraph.extend({
  draggable: true,
})

Thats just two tiny examples, but the underlying ProseMirror schema is really powerful. You should definitely read the documentation to understand all the nifty details.

Attributes

You can use attributes to store additional information in the content. Lets say you want to extend the default paragraph extension to enable paragraphs to have different colors:

const CustomParagraph = Paragraph.extend({
  addAttributes() {
    // Return an object with attribute configuration
    return {
      color: {
        default: 'pink',
      },
    },
  },
})

// Result:
// <p color="pink">Example Text</p>

Thats already enough to tell tiptap about the new attribute, and set 'pink' as the default value. All attributes will be rendered as a HTML attribute by default, and parsed as attributes from the content.

Lets stick with the color example and assume youll want to add an inline style to actually color the text. With the renderHTML function you can return HTML attributes which will be rendered in the output.

This examples adds a style HTML attribute based on the value of color:

const CustomParagraph = Paragraph.extend({
  addAttributes() {
    return {
      color: {
        default: null,
        // Take the attribute values
        renderHTML: attributes => {
          // … and return an object with HTML attributes.
          return {
            style: `color: ${attributes.color}`,
          }
        },
      },
    }
  },
})

// Result:
// <p style="color: pink">Example Text</p>

You can also control how the attribute is parsed from the HTML. Lets say you want to store the color in an attribute called data-color, heres how you would do that:

const CustomParagraph = Paragraph.extend({
  addAttributes() {
    return {
      color: {
        default: null,
        // Customize the HTML parsing (for example, to load the initial content)
        parseHTML: element => {
          return {
            color: element.getAttribute('data-color'),
          }
        },
        // … and customize the HTML rendering.
        renderHTML: attributes => {
          return {
            'data-color': attributes.color,
            style: `color: ${attributes.color}`,
          }
        },
      },
    }
  },
})

// Result:
// <p data-color="pink" style="color: pink">Example Text</p>

You can disable the rendering of attributes, if you pass rendered: false.

Global Attributes

Attributes can be applied to multiple extensions at once. Thats useful for text alignment, line height, color, font family, and other styling related attributes.

Take a closer look at the full source code of the TextAlign extension to see a more complex example. But here is how it works in a nutshell:

import { Extension } from '@tiptap/core'

const TextAlign = Extension.create({
  addGlobalAttributes() {
    return [
      {
        // Extend the following extensions
        types: [
          'heading',
          'paragraph',
        ],
        // … with those attributes
        attributes: {
          textAlign: {
            default: 'left',
            renderHTML: attributes => ({
              style: `text-align: ${attributes.textAlign}`,
            }),
            parseHTML: element => ({
              textAlign: element.style.textAlign || 'left',
            }),
          },
        },
      },
    ]
  },
})

Render HTML

With the renderHTML function you can control how an extension is rendered to HTML. We pass an attributes object to it, with all local attributes, global attributes, and configured CSS classes. Here is an example from the Bold extension:

renderHTML({ HTMLAttributes }) {
  return ['strong', HTMLAttributes, 0]
},

The first value in the array should be the name of HTML tag. If the second element is an object, its interpreted as a set of attributes. Any elements after that are rendered as children.

The number zero (representing a hole) is used to indicate where the content should be inserted. Lets look at the rendering of the CodeBlock extension with two nested tags:

renderHTML({ HTMLAttributes }) {
  return ['pre', ['code', HTMLAttributes, 0]]
},

If you want to add some specific attributes there, import the mergeAttributes helper from @tiptap/core:

renderHTML({ HTMLAttributes }) {
  return ['a', mergeAttributes(HTMLAttributes, { rel: this.options.rel }), 0]
},

Parse HTML

The parseHTML() function tries to load the editor document from HTML. The function gets the HTML DOM element passed as a parameter, and is expected to return an object with attributes and their values. Here is a simplified example from the Bold mark:

  parseHTML() {
    return [
      {
        tag: 'strong',
      },
    ]
  },

This defines a rule to convert all <strong> tags to Bold marks. But you can get more advanced with this, here is the full example from the extension:

  parseHTML() {
    return [
      // <strong>
      {
        tag: 'strong',
      },
      // <b>
      {
        tag: 'b',
        getAttrs: node => node.style.fontWeight !== 'normal' && null,
      },
      // <span style="font-weight: bold">
      {
        style: 'font-weight',
        getAttrs: value => /^(bold(er)?|[5-9]\d{2,})$/.test(value as string) && null,
      },
    ]
  },

This looks for <strong> and <b> tags, and any HTML tag with an inline style setting the font-weight to bold.

As you can see, you can optionally pass a getAttrs callback, to add more complex checks, for example for specific HTML attributes. The callback gets passed the HTML DOM node, except when checking for the style attribute, then its the value.

Commands

import Paragraph from '@tiptap/extension-paragraph'

const CustomParagraph = Paragraph.extend({
  addCommands() {
    return {
      paragraph: () => ({ commands }) => {
        return commands.toggleNode('paragraph', 'paragraph')
      },
    }
  },
})

:::warning Use the commands parameter inside of addCommands All commands are also available through this.editor.commands, but inside of addCommands you must use the commands parameter thats passed to it. :::

Keyboard shortcuts

Most core extensions come with sensible keyboard shortcut defaults. Depending on what you want to build, youll likely want to change them though. With the addKeyboardShortcuts() method you can overwrite the predefined shortcut map:

// Change the bullet list keyboard shortcut
import BulletList from '@tiptap/extension-bullet-list'

const CustomBulletList = BulletList.extend({
  addKeyboardShortcuts() {
    return {
      'Mod-l': () => this.editor.commands.toggleBulletList(),
    }
  },
})

Input rules

With input rules you can define regular expressions to listen for user inputs. They are used for markdown shortcuts, or for example to convert text like (c) to a © (and many more) with the Typography extension. Use the markInputRule helper function for marks, and the nodeInputRule for nodes.

By default text between two tildes on both sides is transformed to striked text. If you want to think one tilde on each side is enough, you can overwrite the input rule like this:

// Use the ~single tilde~ markdown shortcut
import Strike from '@tiptap/extension-strike'
import { markInputRule } from '@tiptap/core'

// Default:
// const inputRegex = /(?:^|\s)((?:~~)((?:[^~]+))(?:~~))$/gm

// New:
const inputRegex = /(?:^|\s)((?:~)((?:[^~]+))(?:~))$/gm

const CustomStrike = Strike.extend({
  addInputRules() {
    return [
      markInputRule(inputRegex, this.type),
    ]
  },
})

Paste rules

Paste rules work like input rules (see above) do. But instead of listening to what the user types, they are applied to pasted content.

There is one tiny difference in the regular expression. Input rules typically end with a $ dollar sign (which means “asserts position at the end of a line”), paste rules typically look through all the content and dont have said $ dollar sign.

Taking the example from above and applying it to the paste rule would look like the following example.

// Check pasted content for the ~single tilde~ markdown syntax
import Strike from '@tiptap/extension-strike'
import { markPasteRule } from '@tiptap/core'

// Default:
// const pasteRegex = /(?:^|\s)((?:~~)((?:[^~]+))(?:~~))/gm

// New:
const pasteRegex = /(?:^|\s)((?:~)((?:[^~]+))(?:~))/gm

const CustomStrike = Strike.extend({
  addPasteRules() {
    return [
      markPasteRule(pasteRegex, this.type),
    ]
  },
})

Events

You can even move your event listeners to a separate extension. Here is an example with listeners for all events:

import { Extension } from '@tiptap/core'

const CustomExtension = Extension.create({
  onCreate() {
    // The editor is ready.
  },
  onUpdate() {
    // The content has changed.
  },
  onSelection() {
    // The selection has changed.
  },
  onTransaction({ transaction }) {
    // The editor state has changed.
  },
  onFocus({ event }) {
    // The editor is focused.
  },
  onBlur({ event }) {
    // The editor isnt focused anymore.
  },
  onDestroy() {
    // The editor is being destroyed.
  },
})

Node views (Advanced)

For advanced use cases, where you need to execute JavaScript inside your nodes, for example to render a sophisticated link preview, you need to learn about node views.

They are really powerful, but also complex. In a nutshell, you need to return a parent DOM element, and a DOM element where the content should be rendered in. Look at the following, simplified example:

import Link from '@tiptap/extension-link'

const CustomLink = Link.extend({
  addNodeView() {
    return () => {
      const container = document.createElement('div')

      container.addEventListener('change', event => {
        alert('clicked on the container')
      })

      const content = document.createElement('div')
      container.append(content)

      return {
        dom: container,
        contentDOM: content,
      }
    }
  },
})

There is a whole lot to learn about node views, so head over to the dedicated section in our guide about node views for more information. If youre looking for a real-world example, look at the source code of the TaskItem node. This is using a node view to render the checkboxes.