Introduction
At it's heart, Harlem uses a plugin system to extend functionality and create powerful additions to your stores.
Official plugins
Here is a list of officially supported Harlem plugins. These plugins are not designed to suit every use-case but instead add basic functionality for common use-cases.
- Devtools (
@harlem/plugin-devtools
) - The devtools plugin adds Vue devtools integration with your stores to show updates to your state in realtime. - SSR (
@harlem/plugin-ssr
) - The SSR plugin enables support for using Harlem stores in a server-side rendered application.
If you require functionality to suit a specific use-case you can write your own plugin. See Writing your own plugin below.
If you feel that there is a piece of common functionality that should be included as an official Harlem plugin please open an issue providing a description of the plugin, the intended API and, if possible, a working example in a codesandbox.
Writing your own plugin
Writing your own plugin for Harlem is very straightforward. The plugin architecture mimics Vue's plugin system except for a few minor differences.
Basic example
Here is an example of a Harlem plugin in it's most basic form:
import type {
HarlemPlugin
} from '@harlem/core';
export default {
name: 'my-plugin',
install(app, eventEmitter, stores) {
// Your plugin logic here
}
} as HarlemPlugin;
Note: If you're using TypeScript it is recommended that you add @harlem/core
as a devDependency and export your plugin object cast as a HarlemPlugin
(as shown in the example above). This will give you full typing support when authoring your plugin.
As you can see the plugin is similar to Vue in that it has a single install
method. Note however that Harlem plugins require a name field to identify your plugin and the install method has eventEmitter
and stores
args as opposed to options
.
The eventEmitter
arg allows you to listen and react to store events such as mutations and errors. You can also emit events and listen to events emitted from other plugins.
The stores
arg is a Map
of all the registered store instances. In your plugin you have complete control to read it's state, enumerate getters/mutations, listen to events, and even reset or mutate state. Because plugins have so much control over the store be very careful not to cause unexpected side-effects to stores.
Providing options
As you can see in the example above there is no obvious mechanism to accept options to your plugin. To accept options you can just export a function taking an options
arg that returns your plugin instance. In fact, this is how the official Harlem plugins are designed.
import type {
HarlemPlugin
} from '@harlem/core';
interface Options {
someOption: string;
someOtherOption: boolean;
}
export default function(options: Options): HarlemPlugin {
return {
name: 'my-plugin',
install(app, eventEmitter, stores) {
// Your plugin logic here
}
};
};
Publishing your plugin
To make it easy for users to find Harlem plugins it is recommended that you name your plugin with a harlem-plugin-
prefix if publishing to the NPM registry.