- amp-script
- Introduction Setup Loading a script from a URL Using an inline script Using the fetch API Multiple fetches Data source for amp-list Using a WebSocket for live updates Showing live data Custom form validation Detecting the operating system Personalization Interacting with <amp-state> Interacting with AMP components Local storage
amp-script
Introduction
The amp-script
component allows you to run custom JavaScript.
Your code runs in a Web Worker, and certain restrictions apply.
Setup
First, you need to import the amp-script
extension.
<script async custom-element="amp-script" src="https://cdn.ampproject.org/v0/amp-script-0.1.js"></script>
For inline scripts, you need to generate a script hash.
Use the data-ampdevmode
attribute to disable this requirement during development.
Visit the documentation to learn more.
<meta name="amp-script-src" content="sha384-iER2Cy-P1498h1B-1f3ngpVEa9NG1xIxKqg0rNkRX0e7p5s0GYdit1MRKsELIQe8 sha384-UPY0FmlOzIjSqWqMgbuaEbqIdvpGY_FzCuTAyoLdrFJb2NYf8cPWJlugA0rUbXjL
Loading a script from a URL
To load your script from a URL, use the src
attribute. This example loads and runs a script called hello.js
.
Valid AMP requires all URLs to be absolute and use https
.
Here's the script in hello-world.js
:
const button = document.getElementById('hello-url'); button.addEventListener('click', () => { const h1 = document.createElement('h1'); h1.textContent = 'Hello World!'; document.body.appendChild(h1); });
And here's the HTML:
<amp-script layout="container" src="https://amp.dev/documentation/examples/components/amp-script/hello-world.js" class="sample">
<button id="hello-url">Say hello!</button>
</amp-script>
Using an inline script
You can also include a script inline and reference it by id
.
Note that, on the script, you need to set type=text/plain
and target=amp-script
.
<amp-script layout="container" script="hello-world" class="sample">
<button id="hello-inline">Say hello!</button>
</amp-script>
<script id="hello-world" type="text/plain" target="amp-script">
const button = document.getElementById('hello-inline');
button.addEventListener('click', () => {
const h1 = document.createElement('h1');
h1.textContent = 'Hello World!';
document.body.appendChild(h1);
});
</script>
amp-script
passes its children to your script as the virtual DOM - not the entire DOM. To your script, those children are the DOM.
Thus, document.body
refers to what's inside the amp-script
tag, not the actual body
. document.body.appendChild(...)
actually adds an element inside the amp-script
element. Using the fetch API
amp-script
supports the fetch API.
amp-script
allows us to update the page on load if it knows that the script can't change the component's height. Here, we use fixed-height
layout, and we specify the height
in an HTML attribute. See the documentation for details.
<amp-script layout="fixed-height" height="36" script="time-script" class="sample">
<div>
The time at page load was: <span id="time" class="answer-text"></span>
</div>
</amp-script>
<script id="time-script" type="text/plain" target="amp-script">
const fetchCurrentTime = async () => {
const response = await fetch('https://amp.dev/documentation/examples/api/time');
const data = await response.json();
const span = document.getElementById('time');
span.textContent = data.time;
}
fetchCurrentTime();
</script>
Multiple fetches
In a container whose size can change, your code can make DOM changes until 5 seconds after the final fetch()
completes. This example makes multiple calls to a slow API. It displays the result from each call when it returns.
<amp-script layout="container" script="multi-fetch-script" class="sample">
<button id="multi-fetch">How slow is our API?</button>
</amp-script>
<script id="multi-fetch-script" type="text/plain" target="amp-script">
const randomTime = () => Math.floor(Math.random() * 10) + 5;
const button = document.getElementById('multi-fetch');
function tripleFetch() {
for (let i =0; i < 3; i++) {
fetch('https://amp.dev/documentation/examples/api/slow-text?delay=' + randomTime())
.then(response => response.text())
.then(insertText);
}
}
function insertText(text) {
const div = document.createElement('div');
div.textContent = text;
document.body.appendChild(div);
}
button.addEventListener('click', tripleFetch);
</script>
Data source for amp-list
An <amp-script>
function can serve as the data source for an <amp-list>
.
-
Use
exportFunction()
to make the function visible to the<amp-list>
. -
Specify the script and the function in the
src
attribute of the<amp-list>
. Use the formsrc="amp-script:{scriptID}:functionName"
, where{scriptID}
is theid
of the<amp-script>
and{functionName}
is the name of the exported function. -
You can use the
nodom
attribute in the<amp-script>
to indicate that the<amp-script>
won't need a DOM. This improves performance, becauseamp-script
doesn't need to load or execute its virtual DOM implementation.
<div class="sample">
<amp-script id="dataFunctions" script="amp-list-source-script" nodom></amp-script>
<script id="amp-list-source-script" type="text/plain" target="amp-script">
function fetchData() {
return fetch('https://amp.dev/static/samples/json/todo.json')
.then(response => response.json())
.then(transformData);
}
function transformData(json) {
let newEntries =
json.items.map(
entry => (entry.done ? 'Already done: ' : 'To do: ') + entry.title
);
return { items: newEntries };
}
exportFunction('fetchData', fetchData);
</script>
<amp-list width="auto" height="70" layout="fixed-height" src="amp-script:dataFunctions.fetchData">
<template type="amp-mustache">
<div>{{.}}</div>
</template>
</amp-list>
</div>
Using a WebSocket for live updates
amp-script
supports WebSockets. This example simulates a live blog.
<amp-script layout="fixed-height" height="200" script="live-blog-script" class="sample" sandbox="allow-forms">
<button id="live-blog-start">Start live blog</button>
<div id="live-blog-area"></div>
</amp-script>
<script id="live-blog-script" type="text/plain" target="amp-script">
const button = document.getElementById('live-blog-start');
const blogDiv = document.getElementById('live-blog-area');
button.addEventListener("click", () => {
button.setAttribute('disabled', '');
button.textContent = 'Live blog begun';
const socket = new WebSocket('wss://amp.dev/documentation/examples/api/socket/live-blog');
socket.onmessage = event => {
let newDiv = document.createElement('div');
let time = new Date().toLocaleTimeString();
newDiv.innerHTML = `<span class="time">${time}: </span><span>${event.data}</span>`;
blogDiv.appendChild(newDiv);
};
});
</script>
Showing live data
You can also use setInterval()
or setTimeout
to get fresh data.
<amp-script layout="fixed-height" height="36" script="live-time-script" class="sample">
<div>
The current time is: <span id="live-time" class="answer-text"></span>
</div>
</amp-script>
<script id="live-time-script" type="text/plain" target="amp-script">
const span = document.getElementById('live-time');
const fetchCurrentTime = async () => {
const response = await fetch('https://amp.dev/documentation/examples/api/time');
const data = await response.json();
span.textContent = data.time;
}
setInterval(fetchCurrentTime, 1000);
</script>
Custom form validation
You can also use amp-script
to implement custom form validation. This script enables the button when the input field contains only capital letters.
<amp-script layout="container" script="form-validation-script" sandbox="allow-forms" class="sample">
<input id="validated-input" placeholder="Only uppercase letters allowed...">
<button id="validated-input-submit" disabled>Submit</button>
</amp-script>
<script id="form-validation-script" type="text/plain" target="amp-script">
const submitButton = document.getElementById('validated-input-submit');
const validatedInput = document.getElementById('validated-input');
function allUpper() {
let isValid = /^[A-Z]+$/.test(validatedInput.value);
if (isValid) {
submitButton.removeAttribute('disabled');
} else {
submitButton.setAttribute('disabled', '');
}
}
validatedInput.addEventListener('input', allUpper);
</script>
Detecting the operating system
Your script has access to global objects like navigator
. This script uses this object to try to guess your device's operating system.
<amp-script layout="fixed-height" height="36" script="user-agent-script" class="sample">
<div>
Your operating system is:
<span id="operating-system" class="answer-text"></span>
</div>
</amp-script>
<script id="user-agent-script" type="text/plain" target="amp-script">
// Adapted with gratitude from https://stackoverflow.com/a/38241481
function getOS() {
const userAgent = navigator.userAgent,
platform = navigator.platform,
macosPlatforms = ['Macintosh', 'MacIntel', 'MacPPC', 'Mac68K'],
windowsPlatforms = ['Win32', 'Win64', 'Windows', 'WinCE'],
iosPlatforms = ['iPhone', 'iPad', 'iPod'];
if (macosPlatforms.includes(platform)) {
return 'Mac OS';
} else if (iosPlatforms.includes(platform)) {
return 'iOS';
} else if (windowsPlatforms.includes(platform)) {
return 'Windows';
} else if (/Android/.test(userAgent)) {
return 'Android';
} else if (/Linux/.test(platform)) {
return 'Linux';
}
return 'Unknown';
}
const span = document.getElementById('operating-system');
span.textContent = getOS();
</script>
Personalization
Similarly, you can use the navigator
object, or other means, to personalize content for your user. The following script detects the browser's language and displays a localized greeting.
<amp-script layout="fixed-height" height="40" script="translation-script" class="sample">
<h2 id="translated-greeting"></h2>
</amp-script>
<script id="translation-script" type="text/plain" target="amp-script">
const translationMap = {
'en': 'Hello',
'fr': 'Bonjour',
'es': 'Hola',
'hi': 'हैलो',
'zh': '你好',
'pr': 'Olá'
};
const lang = navigator.language.slice(0, 2);
let translation = translationMap[lang];
if (!translation) {
translation = "Couldn't recognize your language. So: Saluton";
}
let greeting = document.getElementById('translated-greeting');
greeting.innerHTML = translation + '!';
</script>
Interacting with <amp-state>
Your script can use state variables and binding to affect the area outside the <amp-script>
component.
Here, when a button is clicked, we set a state variable's value to an image URL.
That state variable is bound to the src
attribute of an <amp-img>
.
<amp-state id="imgSrc">
<script type="application/json">
"product1_640x426.jpg"
</script>
</amp-state>
<amp-img layout="responsive" height="426" width="640" src="https://amp.dev/static/samples/img/product1_640x426.jpg" [src]="'https://amp.dev/static/samples/img/' + imgSrc"></amp-img>
<amp-script layout="container" script="state-script" class="sample">
<button id="apple-button" class="fruit-button">Apple</button>
<button id="orange-button" class="fruit-button">Orange</button>
</amp-script>
<script id="state-script" type="text/plain" target="amp-script">
const appleButton = document.getElementById('apple-button');
const orangeButton = document.getElementById('orange-button');
appleButton.addEventListener(
'click',
() => AMP.setState({imgSrc: 'product1_640x426.jpg'})
);
orangeButton.addEventListener(
'click',
() => AMP.setState({imgSrc: 'product2_640x426.jpg'})
);
</script>
Interacting with AMP components
Your script can use state variables and binding to communicate with an AMP component. Bind an attribute in the component to an expression containing a state variable. When your script modifies that state variable, the change will propagate to the component. Similarly, if an AMP component changes the state variable's value, your script can get the new value. This script powers a button that sends an image carousel in a random direction.
Slide 1 of 3
<div id="carousel-sample">
<amp-carousel type="slides" layout="responsive" width="450" height="300" controls loop [slide]="slideIndex" on="slideChange: AMP.setState({slideIndex: event.index})">
<amp-img src="https://amp.dev/static/inline-examples/images/image1.jpg" layout="responsive" width="450" height="300"></amp-img>
<amp-img src="https://amp.dev/static/inline-examples/images/image2.jpg" layout="responsive" width="450" height="300"></amp-img>
<amp-img src="https://amp.dev/static/inline-examples/images/image3.jpg" layout="responsive" width="450" height="300"></amp-img>
</amp-carousel>
<p>Slide <span [text]="slideIndex + 1">1</span> of 3</p>
<amp-script layout="container" script="carousel-script" class="sample">
<button id="carousel-button" class="fruit-button">
Random direction
</button>
</amp-script>
<script id="carousel-script" type="text/plain" target="amp-script">
const button = document.getElementById('carousel-button');
async function randomSlideDirection() {
let oldSlide = Number(await AMP.getState('slideIndex'));
let addend = Math.ceil(Math.random() * 2);
let newSlide = (oldSlide + addend) % 3;
AMP.setState({slideIndex: newSlide});
}
button.addEventListener('click', randomSlideDirection);
</script>
</div>
Local storage
Your script has access to the Web Storage API. This lets you persist user information between browser sessions.
Here, we use localStorage
to track a username.
If you set the username, then reload this page, the username will remain set.
<amp-script layout="fixed-height" script="local-storage-script" height="110" class="sample">
<div>
<span>Current username: </span>
<b id="username-display"></b>
</div>
<div>
<label>Enter new username:</label>
<input id="username-input" type="text" maxlength="20">
</div>
<button id="username-submit">Submit</button>
</amp-script>
<script id="local-storage-script" type="text/plain" target="amp-script">
const submit = document.getElementById('username-submit');
const input = document.getElementById('username-input');
const display = document.getElementById('username-display');
const oldUsername = localStorage.getItem('username');
display.textContent = oldUsername ? oldUsername : '(not set)';
function setUsername() {
const newUsername = input.value;
localStorage.setItem('username', newUsername);
display.textContent = newUsername;
}
submit.addEventListener('click', setUsername);
</script>
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