timepiece/node_modules/lit-element/lit-element.d.ts

183 lines
6.4 KiB
TypeScript

/**
* @license
* Copyright 2017 Google LLC
* SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
*/
/**
* The main LitElement module, which defines the {@linkcode LitElement} base
* class and related APIs.
*
* LitElement components can define a template and a set of observed
* properties. Changing an observed property triggers a re-render of the
* element.
*
* Import {@linkcode LitElement} and {@linkcode html} from this module to
* create a component:
*
* ```js
* import {LitElement, html} from 'lit-element';
*
* class MyElement extends LitElement {
*
* // Declare observed properties
* static get properties() {
* return {
* adjective: {}
* }
* }
*
* constructor() {
* this.adjective = 'awesome';
* }
*
* // Define the element's template
* render() {
* return html`<p>your ${adjective} template here</p>`;
* }
* }
*
* customElements.define('my-element', MyElement);
* ```
*
* `LitElement` extends {@linkcode ReactiveElement} and adds lit-html
* templating. The `ReactiveElement` class is provided for users that want to
* build their own custom element base classes that don't use lit-html.
*
* @packageDocumentation
*/
import { PropertyValues, ReactiveElement } from '@lit/reactive-element';
import { RenderOptions } from 'lit-html';
export * from '@lit/reactive-element';
export * from 'lit-html';
import { LitUnstable } from 'lit-html';
import { ReactiveUnstable } from '@lit/reactive-element';
/**
* Contains types that are part of the unstable debug API.
*
* Everything in this API is not stable and may change or be removed in the future,
* even on patch releases.
*/
export declare namespace Unstable {
/**
* When Lit is running in dev mode and `window.emitLitDebugLogEvents` is true,
* we will emit 'lit-debug' events to window, with live details about the update and render
* lifecycle. These can be useful for writing debug tooling and visualizations.
*
* Please be aware that running with window.emitLitDebugLogEvents has performance overhead,
* making certain operations that are normally very cheap (like a no-op render) much slower,
* because we must copy data and dispatch events.
*/
namespace DebugLog {
type Entry = LitUnstable.DebugLog.Entry | ReactiveUnstable.DebugLog.Entry;
}
}
export declare const UpdatingElement: typeof ReactiveElement;
/**
* Base element class that manages element properties and attributes, and
* renders a lit-html template.
*
* To define a component, subclass `LitElement` and implement a
* `render` method to provide the component's template. Define properties
* using the {@linkcode LitElement.properties properties} property or the
* {@linkcode property} decorator.
*/
export declare class LitElement extends ReactiveElement {
/**
* Ensure this class is marked as `finalized` as an optimization ensuring
* it will not needlessly try to `finalize`.
*
* Note this property name is a string to prevent breaking Closure JS Compiler
* optimizations. See @lit/reactive-element for more information.
*/
protected static ['finalized']: boolean;
static ['_$litElement$']: boolean;
/**
* @category rendering
*/
readonly renderOptions: RenderOptions;
private __childPart;
/**
* @category rendering
*/
protected createRenderRoot(): Element | ShadowRoot;
/**
* Updates the element. This method reflects property values to attributes
* and calls `render` to render DOM via lit-html. Setting properties inside
* this method will *not* trigger another update.
* @param changedProperties Map of changed properties with old values
* @category updates
*/
protected update(changedProperties: PropertyValues): void;
/**
* Invoked when the component is added to the document's DOM.
*
* In `connectedCallback()` you should setup tasks that should only occur when
* the element is connected to the document. The most common of these is
* adding event listeners to nodes external to the element, like a keydown
* event handler added to the window.
*
* ```ts
* connectedCallback() {
* super.connectedCallback();
* addEventListener('keydown', this._handleKeydown);
* }
* ```
*
* Typically, anything done in `connectedCallback()` should be undone when the
* element is disconnected, in `disconnectedCallback()`.
*
* @category lifecycle
*/
connectedCallback(): void;
/**
* Invoked when the component is removed from the document's DOM.
*
* This callback is the main signal to the element that it may no longer be
* used. `disconnectedCallback()` should ensure that nothing is holding a
* reference to the element (such as event listeners added to nodes external
* to the element), so that it is free to be garbage collected.
*
* ```ts
* disconnectedCallback() {
* super.disconnectedCallback();
* window.removeEventListener('keydown', this._handleKeydown);
* }
* ```
*
* An element may be re-connected after being disconnected.
*
* @category lifecycle
*/
disconnectedCallback(): void;
/**
* Invoked on each update to perform rendering tasks. This method may return
* any value renderable by lit-html's `ChildPart` - typically a
* `TemplateResult`. Setting properties inside this method will *not* trigger
* the element to update.
* @category rendering
*/
protected render(): unknown;
}
/**
* END USERS SHOULD NOT RELY ON THIS OBJECT.
*
* Private exports for use by other Lit packages, not intended for use by
* external users.
*
* We currently do not make a mangled rollup build of the lit-ssr code. In order
* to keep a number of (otherwise private) top-level exports mangled in the
* client side code, we export a _$LE object containing those members (or
* helper methods for accessing private fields of those members), and then
* re-export them for use in lit-ssr. This keeps lit-ssr agnostic to whether the
* client-side code is being used in `dev` mode or `prod` mode.
*
* This has a unique name, to disambiguate it from private exports in
* lit-html, since this module re-exports all of lit-html.
*
* @private
*/
export declare const _$LE: {
_$attributeToProperty: (el: LitElement, name: string, value: string | null) => void;
_$changedProperties: (el: LitElement) => any;
};
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