Unlisted
HTTP (deprecated)
andreterron avatar
codeOnVT_modifyResponse
@andreterron
Script
"Code on Val Town" Response modifier Appends the "Code on Val Town" ribbon to an HTTP Response. Usage new modifyResponse(res, { handle: "andre", name: "foo" }) - define which val to link to; new modifyResponse(res) - infer the val from the call stack. Example: @andreterron/openable_res import { modifyResponse } from "https://esm.town/v/andreterron/codeOnVT_modifyResponse"; import { html } from "https://esm.town/v/stevekrouse/html?v=5"; export default async (req: Request): Promise<Response> => { return modifyResponse(html(` <h2>Hello world!</h2> <style>* { font-family: sans-serif }</style> `)); };
andreterron avatar
codeOnValTown
@andreterron
Script
Code on Val Town Adds a "Code on Val Town" ribbon to your page. This lets your website visitors navigate to the code behind it. This uses github-fork-ribbon-css under the hood. Usage Here are 2 different ways to add the "Code on Val Town" ribbon: 1. Wrap your fetch handler (recommended) import { modifyFetchHandler } from "https://esm.town/v/andreterron/codeOnValTown?v=50"; import { html } from "https://esm.town/v/stevekrouse/html?v=5"; export default modifyFetchHandler(async (req: Request): Promise<Response> => { return html(`<h2>Hello world!</h2>`); }); Example: @andreterron/openable_handler 2. Wrap your HTML string import { modifyHtmlString } from "https://esm.town/v/andreterron/codeOnValTown?v=50"; import { html } from "https://esm.town/v/stevekrouse/html?v=5"; export default async (req: Request): Promise<Response> => { return html(modifyHtmlString(`<h2>Hello world!</h2>`)); }; Example: @andreterron/openable_html Other ways We made sure this was very modular, so you can also add the ribbon using these methods: Get the element string directly: @andreterron/codeOnVT_ribbonElement Modify an HTTP Response: @andreterron/codeOnVT_modifyResponse Use .pipeThrough to append to a stream: @andreterron/InjectCodeOnValTownStream Customization Linking to the val These functions infer the val using the call stack or the request URL. If the inference isn't working, or if you want to ensure it links to a specific val, pass the val argument: modifyFetchHandler(handler, {val: { handle: "andre", name: "foo" }}) modifyHtmlString("<html>...", {val: { handle: "andre", name: "foo" }}) Styling You can set the style parameter to a css string to customize the ribbon. Check out github-fork-ribbon-css to learn more about how to style the element. modifyFetchHandler(handler, {style: ".github-fork-ribbon:before { background-color: #333; }"}) modifyHtmlString("<html>...", {style: ".github-fork-ribbon:before { background-color: #333; }"}) Here's how you can hide the ribbon on small screens: modifyFetchHandler(handler, {style: `@media (max-width: 768px) { .github-fork-ribbon { display: none !important; } }`}) To-dos [ ] Let users customize the ribbon. Some ideas are the text, color or placement.
stevekrouse avatar
html
@stevekrouse
Script
An interactive, runnable TypeScript val by stevekrouse
1
Next
andreterron-openable_res.web.val.run
February 27, 2024