readme.md


    Driver.js

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    Powerful, highly customizable vanilla JavaScript engine to drive the user's focus across the page No external dependencies, supports all major browsers and highly customizable


    • Simple: is simple to use and has no external dependency at all
    • Highly customizable: has a powerful API and can be used however you want
    • Highlight anything: highlight any (literally any) element on page
    • Feature introductions: create powerful feature introductions for your web applications
    • Focus shifters: add focus shifters for users
    • User friendly: Everything is controllable by keyboard
    • Consistent behavior: usable across all browsers (including in-famous IE)
    • MIT Licensed: free for personal and commercial use

    For Usage and Examples, have a look at demo

    So, yet another tour library?

    No, it is not. Tours are just one of the many use-cases. Driver.js can be used wherever you need some sort of overlay for the page; some common usecases could be: e.g. dimming the background when user is interacting with some component i.e. the way Facebook does when you try to create a post, using it as a focus shifter to bring user's attention to some component on page, or using it to simulate those "Turn off the Lights" widgets that you might have seen on video players online, etc.

    Driver.js is written in Vanilla JS, has zero dependencies and is highly customizable. It has several options allowing you to manipulate how it behaves and also provides you the hooks to manipulate the elements as they are highlighted, about to be highlighted, or deselected.

    Installation

    You can install it using yarn or npm, whatever you prefer.

    yarn add driver.js
    npm install driver.js

    Or include it using CDN. If you want a specific version, put it as driver.js@0.5 in the name

    <script src="https://unpkg.com/driver.js/dist/driver.min.js"></script>
    <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://unpkg.com/driver.js/dist/driver.min.css">

    Or grab the code from dist directory and include it directly.

    <link rel="stylesheet" href="/dist/driver.min.css">
    <script src="/dist/driver.min.js"></script>

    Usage and Demo

    If you are using some sort of module bundler, import the library and the CSS file

    import Driver from 'driver.js';
    import 'driver.js/dist/driver.min.css';

    otherwise use the script and link tags to import the JavaScript and CSS files.

    Demos and many more usage examples can be found in the docs page.

    Highlighting Single Element – Demo

    You can highlight a single element by simply passing the selector.

    const driver = new Driver();
    driver.highlight('#create-post');

    A real world usage example for this is: using it to dim the background and highlight the required element e.g. the way Facebook does it when creating a post.

    Highlight and Popover – Demo

    You can show additional details beside the highlighted element using the popover.

    const driver = new Driver();
    driver.highlight({
      element: '#some-element',
      popover: {
        title: 'Title for the Popover',
        description: 'Description for it',
      }
    });

    Also, title and description can have HTML as well.

    Positioning the Popover – Demo

    By default, driver automatically finds the suitable position for the popover and displays it. You can override it using position property.

    const driver = new Driver();
    driver.highlight({
      element: '#some-element',
      popover: {
        title: 'Title for the Popover',
        description: 'Description for it',
        // position can be left, left-center, left-bottom, top,
        // top-center, top-right, right, right-center, right-bottom,
        // bottom, bottom-center, bottom-right, mid-center
        position: 'left',
      }
    });

    You can also add offset to the popover position by using the offset property

    const driver = new Driver();
    driver.highlight({
      element: '#some-element',
      popover: {
        title: 'Title for the Popover',
        description: 'Description for it',
        position: 'bottom',
        // Will show it 20 pixels away from the actual position of popover
        // You may also provide the negative values
        offset: 20,
      }
    });

    Creating Feature Introductions – Demo

    Feature introductions are helpful when onboarding new users and giving them an idea about different parts of the application; you can create them seamlessly with Driver. Define the steps and call the start when you want to start presenting. User will be able to control the steps using the keyboard or using the buttons on popovers.

    const driver = new Driver();
    
    // Define the steps for introduction
    driver.defineSteps([
      {
        element: '#first-element-introduction',
        popover: {
          className: 'first-step-popover-class',
          title: 'Title on Popover',
          description: 'Body of the popover',
          position: 'left'
        }
      },
      {
        element: '#second-element-introduction',
        popover: {
          title: 'Title on Popover',
          description: 'Body of the popover',
          position: 'top'
        }
      },
      {
        element: '#third-element-introduction',
        popover: {
          title: 'Title on Popover',
          description: 'Body of the popover',
          position: 'right'
        }
      },
    ]);
    
    // Start the introduction
    driver.start();

    You can also hide the buttons and control the introductions programmatically by using the API methods listed below.

    Asynchronous Actions – Demo

    For any asynchronous actions between the transition steps, you may delay the execution till the action completes. All you have to do is stop the transition using driver.preventMove() in your onNext or onPrevious callbacks and initiate it manually using driver.moveNext(). Here is a sample implementation where it will stop at the second step for four seconds and then move on to the next step.

    const driver = new Driver();
    
    // Define the steps for introduction
    driver.defineSteps([
      {
        element: '#first-element-introduction',
        popover: {
          title: 'Title on Popover',
          description: 'Body of the popover',
          position: 'left'
        }
      },
      {
        element: '#second-element-introduction',
        popover: {
          title: 'Title on Popover',
          description: 'Body of the popover',
          position: 'top'
        },
        onNext: () => {
          // Prevent moving to the next step
          driver.preventMove();
          
          // Perform some action or create the element to move to
          // And then move to that element
          setTimeout(() => {
            driver.moveNext();
          }, 4000);
        }
      },
      {
        element: '#third-element-introduction',
        popover: {
          title: 'Title on Popover',
          description: 'Body of the popover',
          position: 'right'
        }
      },
    ]);
    
    // Start the introduction
    driver.start();

    You can also hide the buttons and control the introductions programmatically by using the API methods listed below.

    API

    Driver comes with several options that you can manipulate to make Driver behave as you like

    Driver Definition

    Here are the options that Driver understands:

    const driver = new Driver({
      className: 'scoped-class',        // className to wrap driver.js popover
      animate: true,                    // Whether to animate or not
      opacity: 0.75,                    // Background opacity (0 means only popovers and without overlay)
      padding: 10,                      // Distance of element from around the edges
      allowClose: true,                 // Whether the click on overlay should close or not
      overlayClickNext: false,          // Whether the click on overlay should move next
      doneBtnText: 'Done',              // Text on the final button
      closeBtnText: 'Close',            // Text on the close button for this step
      stageBackground: '#ffffff',       // Background color for the staged behind highlighted element
      nextBtnText: 'Next',              // Next button text for this step
      prevBtnText: 'Previous',          // Previous button text for this step
      showButtons: false,               // Do not show control buttons in footer
      keyboardControl: true,            // Allow controlling through keyboard (escape to close, arrow keys to move)
      scrollIntoViewOptions: {},        // We use `scrollIntoView()` when possible, pass here the options for it if you want any
      onHighlightStarted: (Element) => {}, // Called when element is about to be highlighted
      onHighlighted: (Element) => {},      // Called when element is fully highlighted
      onDeselected: (Element) => {},       // Called when element has been deselected
      onReset: (Element) => {},            // Called when overlay is about to be cleared
      onNext: (Element) => {},                    // Called when moving to next step on any step
      onPrevious: (Element) => {},                // Called when moving to previous step on any step
    });

    Note that all the button options that you provide in the driver definition can be overridden for a specific step by giving them in the step definition

    Step Definition

    Here are the set of options that you can pass while defining steps defineSteps or the object that you pass to highlight method:

    const stepDefinition = {
      element: '#some-item',        // Query selector string or Node to be highlighted
      stageBackground: '#ffffff',   // This will override the one set in driver
      popover: {                    // There will be no popover if empty or not given
        className: 'popover-class', // className to wrap this specific step popover in addition to the general className in Driver options
        title: 'Title',             // Title on the popover
        description: 'Description', // Body of the popover
        showButtons: false,         // Do not show control buttons in footer
        doneBtnText: 'Done',        // Text on the last button
        closeBtnText: 'Close',      // Text on the close button
        nextBtnText: 'Next',        // Next button text
        prevBtnText: 'Previous',    // Previous button text
      },
      onNext: () => {},             // Called when moving to next step from current step
      onPrevious: () => {},         // Called when moving to previous step from current step
    };

    For example, here is how it would look when highlighting a single element:

    const driver = new Driver(driverOptions);
    driver.highlight(stepDefinition);

    And this is how it would look when creating a step by step guide:

    const driver = new Driver(driverOptions);
    driver.defineSteps([
        stepDefinition1,
        stepDefinition2,
        stepDefinition3,
        stepDefinition4,
    ]);

    API Methods

    Below are the set of methods that are available:

    const driver = new Driver(driverOptions);
    
    // Checks if the driver is active or not
    if (driver.isActivated) {
        console.log('Driver is active');
    }
    
    // In case of the steps guide, you can call below methods
    driver.defineSteps([ stepDefinition1, stepDefinition2, stepDefinition3 ]);
    driver.start(stepNumber = 0);  // Starts driving through the defined steps
    driver.moveNext();             // Moves to next step in the steps list
    driver.movePrevious();         // Moves to previous step in the steps list
    driver.hasNextStep();          // Checks if there is next step to move to
    driver.hasPreviousStep();      // Checks if there is previous step to move to
    
    // Prevents the current move. Useful in `onNext` or `onPrevious` if you want to
    // perform some asynchronous task and manually move to next step
    driver.preventMove();
    
    // Highlights the element using query selector or the step definition
    driver.highlight(string|stepDefinition);
    
    // Reposition the popover and highlighted element
    driver.refresh();
    
    // Resets the overlay and clears the screen
    driver.reset();
    
    // Additionally you can pass a boolean parameter
    // to clear immediately and not do the animations etc
    // Could be useful when you, let's say, want to run
    // a different instance of driver while one was running
    driver.reset(clearImmediately = false);
    
    // Checks if there is any highlighted element
    if(driver.hasHighlightedElement()) {
        console.log('There is an element highlighted');
    }
    
    // Gets the currently highlighted element on screen
    // It would be an instance of `/src/core/element.js`
    const activeElement = driver.getHighlightedElement();
    
    // Gets the last highlighted element, would be an instance of `/src/core/element.js`
    const lastActiveElement = driver.getLastHighlightedElement();
    
    activeElement.getCalculatedPosition(); // Gets screen co-ordinates of the active element
    activeElement.hidePopover();           // Hide the popover
    activeElement.showPopover();           // Show the popover
    
    activeElement.getNode();  // Gets the DOM Element behind this element

    Note – Do not forget to add e.stopPropagation() to the click binding that triggers driver.

    Contributions

    Feel free to submit pull requests, create issues or spread the word.

    Sponsored By

    Thanks to BrowserStack for sponsoring the compatibility testing needs.

    BrowserStack

    License

    MIT © Kamran Ahmed

    项目简介

    A light-weight, no-dependency, vanilla JavaScript engine to drive the user's focus across the page

    🚀 Github 镜像仓库 🚀

    源项目地址

    https://github.com/kamranahmedse/driver.js

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    • JavaScript 92.5 %
    • SCSS 7.5 %