Components for building modern web applications with htmx
npm install fiber-htmx




A Go package to write HTML5 and HTMX components in Go. The package is designed to work with fiber and htmx.
- Write declartive HTML5 components in Go without using templates and with the full-power of a type-safe language, auto-completion, and refactoring.
- Full support for HTMX components.
- No dependencies on JavaScript frameworks.
- Fast rendering of HTML5 and HTMX components.
- Easy to use and learn.
- Easy to extend and customize.
There are additional complex components that help to write HTML5 and HTMX components in Go.
- [x] HTMX
- [x] HTML5
- [x] Heroicons
- [x] TailwindCSS
- [ ] DaisyUI (73% ๐)
``bash`
go get github.com/katallaxie/fiber-htmx
The available web components are published in the fiber-htmx package.
`go`
htmx.HTML5(
htmx.HTML5Props{
Head: []htmx.Node{
htmx.Script(
htmx.Src("https://unpkg.com/fiber-htmx@1.3.32"),
),
htmx.Link(
htmx.Rel("stylesheet"),
htmx.Href("https://unpkg.com/fiber-htmx@1.3.32/dist/out.css"),
),
},
},
htmx.Body(
htmx.ClassNames{},
htmx.Toasts(),
),
)
Creating a button leveraging htmx is as easy as this.
`go`
htmx.Button(
htmx.Attribute("type", "submit")
htmx.Text("Button"),
htmx.HxPost("/api/respond")
)
HTML and HTMX elements are represented as functions in Go. The functions are used to create the elements.
`go`
htmx.Div(
htmx.ClassNames{
tailwind.FontSemibold: true,
},
htmx.Text("Hello World"),
)
This will create the following HTML element.
`html`Hello World
There is support for all HTML5 elements and Tailwind classes. Use import "github.com/katallaxie/fiber-htmx/tailwind" to include Tailwind classes.
Write HTML5 and HTMX components in Go.
`go`
func HelloWorld() htmx.Node {
return htmx.Div(
htmx.ClassNames{
"font-semibold",
},
htmx.Text("Hello World"),
)
}
There are different types of composition. For example, passing children to a component.
`go`
func HelloWorld(children ...htmx.Node) htmx.Node {
return htmx.Div(
htmx.ClassNames{
"font-semibold",
},
htmx.Text("Hello World"),
htmx.Div(
htmx.ClassNames{
"text-red-500",
},
htmx.Group(children...),
),
)
}
Styling of components is done with the htmx.ClassNames type.
`go`
func HelloWorld() htmx.Node {
return htmx.Div(
htmx.ClassNames{
tailwind.FontSemibold: true,
"text-red-500": true,
},
htmx.Text("Hello World"),
)
}
There are also helpers to make the life with styling easier by merging classes.
`go`
func HelloWorld(classes htmx.ClassNames) htmx.Node {
return htmx.Div(
htmx.Merge(
htmx.ClassNames{
"font-semibold",
"text-red-500",
},
classes,
)
htmx.Text("Hello World"),
)
}
There is alos another pattern to create a component. This enables you to track state and to use the component in a more declarative way.
`go
type Page struct {
htmx.Node
}
func NewPage(title, body string) *Page {
return &Page{
Node: htmx.HTML5(
htmx.HTML5Props{
Title: title,
},
htmx.Body(
htmx.Div(
htmx.Text(body),
),
),
),
}
}
`
There is also the option to use htmx.Controller to encapsulate the logic of the components.
`go
func NewHelloWorldController() htmx.ControllerFactory {
return func() htmx.Controller {
return &NewHelloWorldController{}
}
}
type HelloWorldController struct {
htmx.DefaultController
}
func (c *HelloWorldController) Get() error {
return c.Render(
htmx.HTML5(
htmx.HTML5Props{
Title: "index",
Language: "en",
Head: []htmx.Node{},
},
htmx.Div(
htmx.ClassNames{},
htmx.Text("Hello World"),
),
),
)
}
app := fiber.New()
app.Get("/", htmx.NewHxControllerHandler(NewHelloWorldController()))
app.Listen(":3000")
`
An import map is a JSON object that allows developers to control how the browser resolves module specifiers when importing JavaScript modules.
`go`
htmx.Imports(
htmx.ImportsProp{
Resolver: cache.New(jsdeliver.New()),
Pkgs: []imports.ExactPackage{
{
Name: "htmx.org",
Version: "2.0.4",
},
},
Requires: []imports.Require{
{
File: "dist/htmx.esm.js",
},
},
}
),
Import maps let you import JavaScript modules using logical names that map to versioned/digested files โ directly from the browser. So you can build modern JavaScript applications using JavaScript libraries made for ES modules (ESM) without the need for transpiling or bundling. This frees you from needing Webpack, Yarn, npm, or any other part of the JavaScript toolchain. All you need is the asset pipeline that's already included in Rails.
The package has support for Heroicons. The support is for the outline and solid icons.
`go`
icon := heroicons.AcademicCapOutline(heroicons.IconProps{})
icon.Render(os.Stdout)
Air is a live reloading tool for Go applications. It watches your files and reloads the application when changes are detected.
fiber-reload is a package that enables live reloading for fiber applications.
`go`
app := fiber.New()
app.Use(reload.Environment(reload.Development))
reload.WithHotReload(app)
In the application the reload script needs to be added.
`go`
htmx.Script(
htmx.Src("https://unpkg.com/fiber-reload@0.9.0/reload.js"),
htmx.Type("text/javascript"),
),
This reloads the application as the server is restart on file changes. See examples.
1. Run this command to save the llms.txt to .vscode/htmx.md
`bash`
curl -L https://raw.githubusercontent.com/katallaxie/fiber-htmx/refs/heads/main/llms.txt --create-dirs -o .vscode/htmx.md
2. In .vscode/settings.json Add this:
`json`
{
"github.copilot.chat.codeGeneration.instructions": [
{
"file": "./.vscode/htmx.md"
}
]
}
The package supports server-side events (SSE) to update the components on the client-side.
`go`
manager := sse.NewBroadcastManager(5)
app.Get("/sse", sse.NewSSEHandler(manager))๐ Error Handling
There are components that enable handling fallbacks in case of errors and to recover from panics in rendering components.
`go`
htmx.Fallback(
htmx.ErrorBoundary(
func() htmx.Node {
return utils.Panic(errors.New("panic"))
},
),
htmx.Text("Fallback"),
),
See examples to understand the provided interfaces.
`bash`
BenchmarkElement-10 12964440 77.40 ns/op
Benchmark_AttrRender-10 16038232 74.15 ns/op
Benchmark_HTML5_Render-10 1392 847193 ns/op
Benchmark_ClassNames_Render-10 3166761 378.2 ns/op
Rendering 10.000 nodes took >0.8ms`. The package is fast enough to render HTML5 and HTMX components.