Block View
In BlockSuite, blocks can be rendered by any UI framework. A block should be rendered to a DOM element, and we use view
to represent the renderer.
By default, we provide a lit renderer called @blocksuite/lit
. But it's still possible to use other UI frameworks. We'll introduce later about how to write custom block renderers.
Web Component Block View
We provide a BlockComponent
class to help building a lit-based block view.
ts
import { defineBlockSchema, type SchemaToModel } from '@blocksuite/store';
import { BlockComponent } from '@blocksuite/lit';
import { html } from 'lit';
import { customElement } from 'lit/decorators.js';
const myBlockSchema = defineBlockSchema({
//...
props: () => ({
count: 0,
}),
});
type MyBlockModel = SchemaToModel<typeof myBlockSchema>;
@customElements('my-block')
class MyBlockView extends BlockComponent<MyBlockModel> {
override render() {
return html`
<div>
<h3>My Block</h3>
</div>
`;
}
}
Render Children
A block can have children, and we can render them by using renderModelChildren
.
ts
@customElements('my-block')
class MyBlockView extends BlockComponent<MyBlockModel> {
override render() {
return html`
<div>
<h3>My Block</h3>
${this.renderModelChildren(this.model)}
</div>
`;
}
}
Get and Set Props
It's easy to get and set props in a block view.
ts
@customElements('my-block')
class MyBlockView extends BlockComponent<MyBlockModel> {
private _onClick = () => {
this.doc.updateBlock(this.model, {
count: this.model.count + 1,
});
};
override render() {
return html`
<div>
<h3>My Block</h3>
<p>Count: ${this.model.count}</p>
<button @click=${this._onClick}>Add</button>
</div>
`;
}
}
It's also possible to watch prop changes to create something like computed props
.
ts
@customElements('my-block')
class MyBlockView extends BlockComponent<MyBlockModel> {
private _yen = '0¥';
override connectedCallback() {
super.connectedCallback();
this.model.propsUpdated.on(() => {
this._yen = `${this.model.count * 100}¥`;
});
}
override render() {
return html`
<div>
<h3>My Block</h3>
<p>Price: ${this._yen}</p>
<button @click=${this._onClick}>Add</button>
</div>
`;
}
}
You can get the std
instance from this.std
to use the full power of block-std
.