tiptap/docs/installation/alpine.md
2021-10-19 22:30:45 +02:00

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title tableOfContents
Alpine WYSIWYG true

Alpine.js

Introduction

The following guide describes how to integrate Tiptap with your Alpine.js project.

For the sake of this guide well use Vite to quickly set up a project, but you can use whatever youre used to. Vite is just really fast and we love it.

Requirements

1. Create a project (optional)

If you already have an existing Alpine.js project, thats fine too. Just skip this step and proceed with the next step.

For the sake of this guide, lets start with a fresh Vite project called tiptap-example. Vite sets up everything we need, just select the Vanilla JavaScript template.

npm init vite@latest Tiptap-example -- --template vanilla
cd Tiptap-example
npm install
npm run dev

2. Install the dependencies

Okay, enough of the boring boilerplate work. Lets finally install Tiptap! For the following example youll need alpinejs, the @tiptap/core package and the @tiptap/starter-kit which has the most common extensions to get started quickly.

# install with npm
npm install alpinejs @tiptap/core @tiptap/starter-kit

# install with Yarn
yarn add alpinejs @tiptap/core @tiptap/starter-kit

If you followed step 1, you can now start your project with npm run dev or yarn dev, and open http://localhost:3000 in your favorite browser. This might be different, if youre working with an existing project.

3. Initialize the editor

To actually start using Tiptap, youll need to write a little bit of JavaScript. Lets put the following example code in a file called main.js.

This is the fastest way to get Tiptap up and running with Alpine.js. It will give you a very basic version of Tiptap. No worries, you will be able to add more functionality soon.

import Alpine from 'alpinejs'
import { Editor } from '@tiptap/core'
import StarterKit from '@tiptap/starter-kit'

window.setupEditor = function(content) {
  return {
    editor: null,
    content: content,
    updatedAt: Date.now(), // force Alpine to rerender on selection change
    init(element) {
      this.editor = new Editor({
        element: element,
        extensions: [
          StarterKit,
        ],
        content: this.content,
        onUpdate: ({ editor }) => {
          this.content = editor.getHTML()
        },
        onSelectionUpdate: () => {
          this.updatedAt = Date.now()
        },
      })
    },
  }
}

window.Alpine = Alpine
Alpine.start()

4. Add it to your app

Now, lets replace the content of the index.html with the following example code to use the editor in our app.

<!-- index.html -->
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
  <meta charset="UTF-8">
</head>
<body>
  <div x-data="setupEditor('<p>Hello World! :-)</p>')" x-init="() => init($refs.element)">

    <template x-if="editor">
      <div class="menu">
        <button
          @click="editor.chain().toggleHeading({ level: 1 }).focus().run()"
          :class="{ 'is-active': editor.isActive('heading', { level: 1 }) }"
        >
          H1
        </button>
        <button
          @click="editor.chain().toggleBold().focus().run()"
          :class="{ 'is-active': editor.isActive('bold') }"
        >
          Bold
        </button>
        <button
          @click="editor.chain().toggleItalic().focus().run()"
          :class="{ 'is-active': editor.isActive('italic') }"
        >
          Italic
        </button>
      </div>
    </template>

    <div x-ref="element"></div>
  </div>

  <script type="module" src="/main.js"></script>

  <style>
    body { margin: 2rem; font-family: sans-serif; }
    button.is-active { background: black; color: white; }
    .ProseMirror { padding: 0.5rem 1rem; margin: 1rem 0; border: 1px solid #ccc; }
  </style>
</body>
</html>

You should now see Tiptap in your browser. Time to give yourself a pat on the back! :)