A rich text editor framework for the web platform, with patches for
browser inconsistencies and sensible defaults.
For an introduction, you may want to read the blog post Inside the Guardian’s CMS: meet Scribe, an extensible rich text editor.
undefinedPlease note: There is a lot of missing documentation for Scribe and many of
its plugins. We plan to improve this, however in the meantime we encourage
you to look at the code. Scribe is very small in comparison to other libraries
of its kind.
You can join us on IRC at [#scribejs] on freenode, or via the Google Group.
At the core of Scribe we have:
contenteditable;Scribe patches many browser inconsistencies in the
native command API.
Natively, contenteditable will produce DIVs for new lines. This is not a bug.
However, this is not ideal because in most cases we require semantic HTML to be
produced.
Scribe overrides this behaviour to produce paragraphs (Ps; default) or BRs (with
block element mode turned off) for new lines instead.
bower install scribe
Alternatively, you can access the distribution files through GitHub releases.
allowBlockElements
Scribe is an AMD module:
require(['scribe', 'scribe-plugin-blockquote-command', 'scribe-plugin-toolbar'],
function (Scribe, scribePluginBlockquoteCommand, scribePluginToolbar) {
var scribeElement = document.querySelector('.scribe');
// Create an instance of Scribe
var scribe = new Scribe(scribeElement);
// Use some plugins
scribe.use(scribePluginBlockquoteCommand());
var toolbarElement = document.querySelector('.toolbar');
scribe.use(scribePluginToolbar(toolbarElement));
});
You can see a live example here, or view the code here.
Also be sure to check the examples directory for an
AMD syntax example as well as a CommonJS (browserify) example.
A plugin is simply a function that receives Scribe as an argument:
function myPlugin(scribe) {}
A consumer can then use your plugin with Scribe.use:
scribe.use(myPlugin);
Plugins may package whatever functionality you desire, and you are free to use
native APIs to do so. However, you are required to wrap any DOM manipulation in
a transaction, so that we can capture state changes for the history. For
example:
function myPlugin(scribe) {
scribe.transactionManager.run(function () {
// Do some fancy DOM manipulation
});
}
Theoretically, Scribe should work in any browser with the
Selection API, the Range API, and support for most
of the non-standardised list of commands that appears in
this MDN article. It has been tested in Firefox >= 31,
Chrome >= 35.
See the status of our integration tests
for more up-to-date support information.
Commands are objects that describe formatting operations. For example,
the bold command.
Commands tell Scribe:
document.queryCommand);document.queryCommandState);document.queryCommandEnabled)To ensure a separation of concerns, commands are split into multiple layers.
When a command method is called by Scribe, it will be filtered through these
layers sequentially.
We have created a collection of plugins for advanced rich text editing purposes,
all of which can be seen in use in our example.
Yes. The Guardian is using Scribe as the basis for their
internal CMS’ rich text editor.
It is likely that there will be unknown edge cases, but these will be addressed
when they are discovered.
See CONTRIBUTING.md for information about running tests.
The native API for formatting content in a
contenteditable has many browser inconsistencies.
Scribe has to manipulate the DOM directly on top of using these commands in order to patch
those inconsistencies. What’s more, there is no widely supported command for
telling contenteditable to insert Ps or BRs for line breaks. Thus, to add
this behaviour Scribe needs to manipulate the DOM once again.
The undo stack breaks whenever DOM manipulation is used instead of the native
command API, therefore we have to use our own.
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