PRIMROSE TEXT EDITOR
Primrose is a syntax highlighting text editor that renders into an HTML5 Canvas element. This is particularly useful for texturing 3D objects in WebGL apps.
Features
International keyboard support (left-to-right rendering only)
Wide Unicode character-aware
Line numbering
Color theming
Syntax highlighting for:
JavaScript,
HTML, and
BASIC
Liscense
Primrose is free, open source software (MIT) and may readily be used with other FOSS projects.
Contributing
Conduct
First, please read the Conduct Policy.
Contributions
If you think you can be a polite person in accordance with the Conduct Policy, I'd be more than happy to add anyone who asks as a contributor. Just email me your profile info and a brief description of what you'd like to work on.
Getting started with Primrose
In a 2D page
Here is a basic example that creates an editor in a 2D web page.
index.html
In a 3D WebGL app
NOTE: While Primrose can manage most input events on its own, in WebGL contexts, it's not able to figure out what the user's pointer is pointing at. Mouse or VR motion controller support requires implementing Raycast-based picking on your own. However, Primrose does offer a simple interface for implementing pointer operations.
API
The documentation here represents the public API. Any properties, methods, functions, or classes not listed here are considered either internal state or deprecated features and may change or be removed at any time.
Primrose
The Primrose class extends the EventTarget class. It is a text editor control that renders to an HTML5 Canvas, using the CanvasRenderingContext2D API.
Importing
To get the Primrose class, import it from the package bundle:
import { Primrose } from "./node_modules/primrose/primrose.js";
There is also a minified version:
import { Primrose } from "./node_modules/primrose/primrose.min.js";
You can also import without package bundling, which is probably preferred if you intend to build your own bundle:
import { Primrose } from "./node_modules/primrose/src/primrose.js";
Constructor
You create a Primrose control in one of two ways. In creating the control, there are a set of options that you can specify. The two ways are:
In HTML
Create a tag in your document before the page has loaded.
Specify the options as a comma seperated list of key-value pairs, each separated by an equals sign (=), on an attribute on the tag named data-options.
Example
In JavaScript
Create a new instance of the Primrose class, passing the options as a JavaScript object
Example
new Primrose({ lineNumbers: false, wordWrap: false });
Options
The options object has the following fields:
Default: null - a document element or a canvas that represents the Primrose control. This can either be:
a tag (which is a generic HTML tag in DOM), in which case the editor Canvas will be inserted into the tag, or
an HTMLCanvasElement element or OffscreeCanvas object, in which case the editor will take control of the canvas.
null, which instructs Primrose to construct its own Canvas element. If OffscreenCanvas is available, that will be used instead of HTMLCanvasElement.
width:Number - Default: undefined - the scale-independent width of the canvas used when element is null
height:Number - Default: undefined - the scale-independent height of the canvas used when element is null
padding:Number - Default: 0 - the scale-independent amount of inset for rendering the contents from the edge of the canvas. This is useful for texturing objects where the texture edge cannot be precisely controlled.
fontSize:Number - Default: 16 - the scale-independent height to draw characters.
scaleFactor:Number - *Default: window.devicePixelRatio - A multiplicative factor for how large to scale the width, height, fontSize, and padding of the canvas, to improve rendering sharpness on high-resolution displays. With THREE.js, it's best to set this value to 1 and change the width, height, and fontSize manually.
readOnly:Boolean - Default: false - indicates whether or not the text editor should allow changes to its value.
multiLine:Boolean - Default: true - indicates whether or not the text editor should break long lines onto new lines.
scrollBars:Boolean - Default: true - indicates whether or not scroll bars should be rendered at the right and bottom in the control. If wordWrap is enabled, the bottom, horizontal scrollbar will not be rendered.
lineNumbers:Boolean - Default: true - indicates whether or not line numbers should be rendered on the left side of the control.
language:String - Default: "JavaScript" - A name for the type of syntax highlighting to perform. This value is not case-sensitive. Valid values are:
"basic" for Basic,
"bas" for Basic,
"html" for HTML,
"javascript" for JavaScript,
"js" for JavaScript,
"plaintext" for PlainText,
"txt" for PlainText
and any case-variation thereof.
Events
The events in Primrose are all of type Event, having no other properties set on them. The only way to register the events is to call addEventListener, i.e. there are no on### properties on the object for the event handlers.
change:Event - Fires when the text in the control has changed.
blur:Event - Fires when the control first loses focus. Calls to blur() while the control is not focused will not fire the blur event.
focus:Event - Fires when the control first gains focus. Calls to focus() while the control is focused will not fire the focus event.
over:Event - Fires when the control is first hovered over by a pointer.
update:Event - Fires when the Primrose control finishes rendering.
Public Methods
addEventListener(type:String, handler:Function(evt:Event))
Add a listener for one of the event types listed above.
Example
const editor = new Primrose({
element: document.querySelector("canvas")
});
function onChange(){
console.log("changed!");
}
editor.addEventListener("change", onChange);
editor.value = "Something"; // 'changed!' printed out to console.
Parameters
Events section above.
handler:Function(evt:Event) - A callback function to receive the event. This function will be provided an argument of type Event
removeEventListener(type:String, handler:Function(evt:Event))
Remove an event listener that was added with addEventListener()
Example
const editor = new Primrose({
element: document.querySelector("canvas")
});
function onChange(){
console.log("changed!");
}
editor.addEventListener("change", onChange);
editor.value = "Something"; // 'changed!' printed out to console.
editor.removeEventListener("change", onChange);
editor.value = "Something else"; // nothing printed out to console.
blur()
Removes focus from the control.
Example
const editor = new Primrose({
element: document.querySelector("canvas")
});
function onBlur(){
console.log("blurred!");
}
editor.addEventListener("blur", onBlur);
if(!editor.focused){
editor.focus();
}
editor.blur(); // 'blurred!' printed out to console.
editor.blur(); // nothing printed out to console.
editor.focus();
editor.blur(); // 'blurred!' printed out to console.
focus()
Sets the control to be the focused control. If all controls in the app have been properly registered with the Event Manager, then any other, currently focused control will first get blur'd.
Example
const editor = new Primrose({
element: document.querySelector("canvas")
});
function onFocus(){
console.log("focused!");
}
editor.addEventListener("focused", onFocus);
if(editor.focused){
editor.blur();
}
editor.focus(); // 'focused!' printed out to console.
editor.focus(); // nothing printed out to console.
editor.blur();
editor.focus(); // 'focused!' printed out to console.
scrollTo(x:Number, y:Number)
Move the scroll window to a new location. Values get clamped to the text contents of the editor.
Parameters
x - the horizontal position to which to scroll. If wordWrap is enabled, this has no effect.
y - the vertical position to which to scroll.
Return Value
true if the scrolling was clamped to the upper or lower bounds of the content, false otherwise.
scrollBy(dx:Number, dy:Number)
Move the scroll window by a given amount to a new location. The final location of the scroll window gets clamped to the text contents of the editor.
Parameters
dx - the horizontal offset by which to scroll. If wordWrap is enabled, this has no effect.
dy - the vertical offset by which to scroll.
Return Value
true if the scrolling was clamped to the upper or lower bounds of the content, false otherwise.
setSize(width:Number, height:Number)
Sets the scale-independent width and height of the editor control.
Example
const editor = new Primrose({
width: 512,
height: 512,
scaleFactor: 2
});
if(editor.width === 512) { /* true */ }
if(editor.canvas.width === 1024) { /* true */}
editor.setSize(1024, 1024);
if(editor.width === 1024) { /* true */ }
if(editor.canvas.width === 2048) { /* true */}
Parameters
width - the nominal width of the editor canvas. This value is scaled by scaleFactor before actually setting the canvas width.
height - the nominal height of the editor canvas. This value is scaled by scaleFactor before actually setting the canvas height.
resize()
If the canvas element used by the editor control is in the document tree, this method forces the editor to check the client bounds of the DOM element and resize the rendering resolution of the canvas accordingly, to maintain rendering sharpness. Normally, this does not need to be called in user-code, as the Event Manager handles resizing.
If the canvas does not need to be resized, then no action occurs.
Public Properties
element:HTMLElement - read-only
The DOM element that was used to construct the Primrose control out of the document tree. If the Control was not constructed from the document tree, this value will be null.
isInDocument:Boolean - read-only
Returns false if element is null. Returns true otherwise.
The canvas to which the editor is rendering text. If the options.element value was set to a canvas, that canvas will be returned. Otherwise, the canvas will be the canvas that Primrose created for the control. If OffscreenCanvas is not available, the canvas will be an HTMLCanvasElement.
hovered:Boolean - readOnly
Returns true when the control has a pointer hovering over it.
focused:Boolean - read/write
Returns true when the control has been selected. Writing to this value will change the focus state of the control.
If the control is already focused and focused is set to true, or the control is not focused and focus is set to false, nothing happens.
If the control is focused and focused is set to false, the control is blurred, just as if blur() was called.
If the control is not focused and focused is set to true, the control is focused, just as if focus() was called.
readOnly:Boolean - read/write
Indicates whether or not the text in the editor control can be modified.
wordWrap:Boolean - read/write
Indicates whether or not the text in the editor control will be broken across lines when it reaches the right edge of the editor control.
value:String - read/write
The text value contained in the control. NOTE: if the text value was set with Windows-style newline characters (\r\n), the newline characters will be normalized to Unix-style newline characters (\n).
text:String - read/write
A synonymn for value
selectedText:String - read/write
The range of text that is currently selected by the cursor. If no text is selected, reading selectedText returns the empty string ("") and writing to it inserts text at the current cursor location. If text is selected, reading selectedText returns the text between the front and back cursors, writing to it overwrites the selected text, inserting the provided value.
selectionStart:Number - read/write
The string index at which the front cursor is located. NOTE: the "front cursor" is the main cursor, but does not necessarily represent the beginning of the selction range. The selection range runs from the minimum of front and back cursors, to the maximum.
selectionEnd:Number - read/write
The string index at which the back cursor is located. NOTE: the "back cursor" is the selection range cursor, but does not necessarily represent the end of the selction range. The selection range runs from the minimum of front and back cursors, to the maximum.
selectionDirection:String - read-only
If the back cursor is behind the front cursor, this value returns "backward". Otherwise, "forward" is returned.
tabWidth:Number - read/write
The number of spaces to insert when the Tab key is pressed. Changing this value does not convert existing tabs, it only changes future tabs that get inserted.
theme:Theme - read/write
A JavaScript object that defines the color and style values for rendering different UI and text elements.
language:Grammar - read/write
Set or get the language pack used to tokenize the control text for syntax highlighting.
Example
import { Primrose, JavaScript, HTML } from "./package/primrose.min.js";
const editor = new Primrose({
elem: document.querySelector("canvas")
});
if(editor.language === JavaScript) { /* true */ }
editor.language = HTML;
if(editor.language === HTML) { /* true */ }
padding:Number - read/write
The Number of pixels to inset the control rendering from the edge of the canvas. This is useful for texturing objects where the texture edge cannot be precisely controlled. This value is scale-independent.
showLineNumbers:Boolean - read/write
Indicates whether or not line numbers should be rendered on the left side of the control.
showScrollBars:Boolean - read/write
Indicates whether or not scroll bars should be rendered at the right and bottom in the control. If wordWrap is enabled, the bottom, horizontal scrollbar will not be rendered.
fontSize:Number - read/write
The Number of pixels tall to draw characters. This value is scale-independent.
Example
const editor = new Primrose({
element: document.querySelector("canvas")
});
if(editor.fontSize === 16) { /* default value */ }
editor.fontSize = 24;
if(editor.fontSize === 24) { /* true */ }
editor.scaleFactor = 2;
if(editor.fontSize === 24) { /* true */ }
scaleFactor:Number - read/write
The value by which pixel values are scaled before being used by the editor control.
With THREE.js, it's best to set this value to 1 and change the width, height, and fontSize manually.
Example
const editor = new Primrose({
width: 512,
height: 512,
scaleFactor: 1
});
if(editor.width === 512) { /* true */ }
if(editor.canvas.width === 512) { /* true */ }
editor.scaleFactor = 2;
if(editor.width === 512) { /* true */ }
if(editor.canvas.width === 1024) { /* true */ }
width:Number - read/write
The scale-independent width of the editor control.
Example
const editor = new Primrose({
width: 512,
height: 512,
scaleFactor: 2
});
if(editor.width === 512) { /* true */ }
if(editor.canvas.width === 1024) { /* true */}
height:Number - read/write
The scale-independent height of the editor control.
Example
const editor = new Primrose({
width: 512,
height: 512,
scaleFactor: 2
});
if(editor.height === 512) { /* true */ }
if(editor.canvas.height === 1024) { /* true */}
Pointer Event Handlers for WebGL Contexts
In 2D operation, you don't need to manually wire up any events. But in WebGL contexts, you will need to perform your own raycasting in response to user input gestures and tell Primrose how to translate those into pointer actions.
These events require a parameter value that is a Raycast intersection as provided by THREE.js. The intersection has a Vector2 property named uv that the event handlers read to determine the location of the pointer within the control. The uv.x field is scaled by the control's width property, and 1 - uv.y is scaled by the control's height property.
When implementing pointer events with VR Motion Controllers, you must decide if you want mouse-like our touch-like behavior.
Mouse-like Behavior
Touch-like Behavior
touch.readStartEventUV(evt:THREE.Raycaster Intersection) - Read's a THREE.js Raycast intersection to perform touch-like behavior for the first finger touching down gesture.
Static Methods
These are methods that exist on the Primrose class itself.
Primrose.add(key:any, control:Primrose)
Registers a new Primrose editor control with the Event Manager, to wire-up key, clipboard, and mouse wheel events, and to manage the currently focused element.
The Event Manager maintains the references in a WeakMap, so when the JS Garbage Collector collects the objects, they will be gone.
Multiple objects may be used to register a single control with the Event Manager without causing issue. This is useful for associating the control with closed objects from other systems, such as Three.js Mesh objects being targeted for pointer picking.
If you are working with Three.js, it's recommended to use the Mesh on which you are texturing the canvas as the key when adding the editor to the Event Manager.
Example
// with an existing canvas
const editor = new Primrose({
element: document.querySelector("canvas"),
scaleFactor: devicePixelRatio
});
Primrose.add("myOwnKeyOfAnyKind", editor);
Parameters
key - an arbitrary object that can be used to retrieve the editor back out again.
control - an instance of the Primrose class.
Retrun Value
Undefined
Primrose.has(key:any):Boolean
Checks for the existence of a control, by the key that the user supplied when calling Primrose.add()
Example
// with an existing canvas
const editor = new Primrose({
element: document.querySelector("canvas"),
scaleFactor: devicePixelRatio
});
const key = new Object();
Primrose.add(key, editor);
Primrose.has(key); // true
Primrose.has("SomeOtherKey"); // false
Parameters
key - the key that was used to add the control to the Event Manager.
Return Value
true if the key maps to a control in the Event Manager.
false if the given key was not used to register a control with the Event Manager.
Primrose.get(key:any):Primrose
Gets the control associated with the given key.
Example
// with an existing canvas
const editor = new Primrose({
element: document.querySelector("canvas"),
scaleFactor: devicePixelRatio
});
const key = new Object();
Primrose.add(key, editor);
const ed1 = Primrose.get(key);
if(editor === ed1) { /* true */ }
if(Primrose.get("anyOtherKey") === null) { /* true */}
Parameters
key - the key that was used to add the control to the Event Manager.
Return Value
null if no control in the Event Manager matches the given key.
a Primrose control, otherwise.
Static Properties
These are properties on the Primrose class itself.
Primrose.hoveredControl:Primrose - read-only
The current Primrose control that has the mouse hovered over it. In 2D contexts, you probably don't need to check this value, but in WebGL contexts, this is useful for helping Primrose manage events.
If no control is hovered, this returns null.
Primrose.focusedControl:Primrose - read-only
The current Primrose control that has pointer-focus. It will receive all keyboard and clipboard events. In 2D contexts, you probably don't need to check this value, but in WebGL contexts, this is useful for helping Primrose manage events.
If no control is focused, this returns null.
Primrose.editors:Array of Primrose - read-only
An array of all of the Primrose editor controls that Primrose currently knows about.
This array is not mutable and is not the array used by the Event Manager. It is a read-only clone that is created whenever the Event Manager registers or removes a new control
Primrose.ready:Promise - read-only
A Promise that resolves when the document is ready and the Event Manager has finished its initial setup.
Theme
Themes control the rendering of text and UI elements within the Primrose control. Themes are JavaScript objects that match the following pattern. All fields are required; there are no optional fields.
Example
{
name: "Dark",
cursorColor: "white",
lineNumbers: {
foreColor: "white"
},
regular: {
backColor: "black",
foreColor: "#c0c0c0",
currentRowBackColor: "#202020",
selectedBackColor: "#404040",
unfocused: "rgba(0, 0, 255, 0.25)"
},
strings: {
foreColor: "#aa9900",
fontStyle: "italic"
},
regexes: {
foreColor: "#aa0099",
fontStyle: "italic"
},
numbers: {
foreColor: "green"
},
comments: {
foreColor: "yellow",
fontStyle: "italic"
},
keywords: {
foreColor: "cyan"
},
functions: {
foreColor: "brown",
fontWeight: "bold"
},
members: {
foreColor: "green"
},
error: {
foreColor: "red",
fontStyle: "underline italic"
}
}
Grammar
Grammars are collections of RegExps that define rules for performing the necessary tokenization to be able to achieve syntax highlighting. The token types roughly correspond to coloring settings in the Themes They can be quite difficult to develop. Following the example below, implement each of the token types as necessary for the language you would like to parse.
Each Grammar rule is applied in sequence. In the example below, regexes is applied before stringDelim, giving priority to matching regular expressions over string literals, and stringDelim occurs before numbers, so that numbers inside of strings do not erroneously get matched as numbers.
The supported types of tokens are:
lineNumbers - for languages like BASIC that have explicit line-numbering, the lineNumbers token type extra
startBlockComments - for languages that have block-delimited commenting, like JavaScripts /* */, use this rule to match the beginning of the block comment.
endBlockComments - for languages that have block-delimited commenting, like JavaScripts /* */, use this rule to match the end of the block comment.
regexes - for languages that have built-in literal syntax for Regular Expressions.
stringDelim - use this rule to provide a list of tokens that delimit string literals.
startLineComments - for language with line-ending commenting, like JavaScripts //, use this rule to match the beginning of the comment. The comment will then run to the first newline character (hence one of the reasons newline get matched first).
numbers - use this rule to match integer and decimal numbers prior to matching any other keywords or identifiers that may contain numbers.
keywords - use this rule to match language keywords, like for or let in JavaScript.
functions - use this rule to match function expressions.
members - use this rule to match identifiers that are accessed from an object.
Additionally, there are newlines, whitespace, and regular-type tokens. The newlines and whitespace types are provided by default by the Grammar class. The regular type is a catch-all type for any text that does not match any previous rule.
NOTE: there is no general-purpose means by which we can gain perfect understanding of every language's syntax. The Grammar system provided by Primrose is meant for a high-level, textual understanding of language and not meant to completely parse and understand the structure of the program.
Example
export const JavaScript = new Grammar("JavaScript", [
["newlines", /(?:\r\n|\r|\n)/],
["whitespace", /(?:\s+)/],
["startBlockComments", /\/\*/],
["endBlockComments", /\*\//],
["regexes", /(?:^|,|;|\(|\[|\{)(?:\s*)(\/(?:\\\/|[^\n\/])+\/)/],
["stringDelim", /("|'|`)/],
["startLineComments", /\/\/.*$/m],
["numbers", /-?(?:(?:\b\d*)?\.)?\b\d+\b/],
["keywords",
/\b(?:break|case|catch|class|const|continue|debugger|default|delete|do|else|export|finally|for|function|if|import|in|instanceof|let|new|return|super|switch|this|throw|try|typeof|var|void|while|with)\b/
],
["functions", /(\w+)(?:\s*\()/],
["members", /(\w+)\./],
["members", /((\w+\.)+)(\w+)/]
]);