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Pinafore-Web-Client-Frontend/docs/Architecture.md
2021-02-14 14:01:52 -08:00

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Architecture

This document describes some things about the codebase that are worth knowing if you're trying to contribute. Basically think of it as a "lay of the land" as well as "weird unusual stuff that may surprise you."

Overview

Pinafore uses SvelteJS and SapperJS. Most of it is a fairly typical Svelte/Sapper project, but there are some quirks, which are described below. This list of quirks is non-exhaustive.

Prebuild process

The template.html is itself templated. The "template template" has some inline scripts, CSS, and SVGs injected into it during the build process. SCSS is used for global CSS and themed CSS, but inside of the components themselves, it's just vanilla CSS because I couldn't figure out how to get Svelte to run a SCSS preprocessor.

Lots of small files

Highly modular, highly functional, lots of single-function files. Tends to help with tree-shaking and code-splitting, as well as avoiding circular dependencies.

emoji-picker-element is loaded as a third-party bundle

emoji-picker-element uses Svelte 3, whereas we use Svelte 2. So it's just imported as a bundled custom element, not as a Svelte component.

Some third-party code is bundled

For various reasons, a11y-dialog, autosize, and timeago are forked and bundled into the source code. This was either because something needed to be tweaked or fixed, or I was trimming unused code and didn't see much value in contributing it back, because it was too Pinafore-specific.

Every Sapper page is "duplicated"

To get a nice animation on the nav bar when you switch columns, every page is lazy-loaded as LazyPage.html. This "lazy page" is merely delayed a few frames to let the animation run. Therefore there is a duplication between src/routes and src/routes/_pages. The "lazy page" is in the former, and the actual page is in the latter. One imports the other.

There are multiple stores

Originally I conceived of separating out the virtual list into a separate npm package, so I gave it its own Svelte store (virtualListStore.js). This never happened, but it still has its own store. This is useful anyway, because each store has its state maintained in an LRU cache that allows us to keep the scroll position in the virtual list e.g. when the user hits the back button.

Also, the main store.js store is explicitly loaded by every component that uses it. So there's no store inheritance; every component just declares whatever store it uses. The main store.js is the primary one.

There is a global event bus

It's in eventBus.js. This is useful for some stuff that is hard to do with standard Svelte or DOM events.