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A javascript implementation of the CSS Regions specification, as of August 2013

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CSS Regions Polyfill

The css-regions polyfill is an unprefixed JavaScript implementation of the CSS Regions specification. You can use the polyfill either to patch browsers which do not have a native regions implementation, or in all browsers.

The advantage of the first method is that you get a faster experience on supported browsers, the disadvantage is that you have to deal with different experimental implementations.

Using the Polyfill

You can install the polyfill simply by adding a script reference to it on your page.

<script src="/cssregions.min.js"></script>

Once the polyfilled is installed, you can use unprefixed css-regions in any of your <link> or <style> stylesheets accessible to your domain, even the one generated via dynamic insertion of tags via JavaScript:

.content-source {
    flow-into: content-flow contents;
}

.content-region {
	flow-from: content-flow;
	region-fragment: break;
}

That's it. You're ready to go.

Feature set

Supported features

The polyfill support almost all features of the latest css-regions spec. The polyfill has been tested using the W3C test suite to make sure it was actually valid in most corner cases, so that you can rely on it working properly.

CSS:
	
	flow-into: <flow-nane>
	flow-into: <flow-name> contents
	
	flow-from: <flow-name>
	
	region-fragment: auto
	region-fragment: break
	
	break-before: region
	break-after: region
	
	auto-sized regions
	live-update on DOM changes
	styling of the fragments inherited from source
	mouse events working properly on the source
	
JS:
	
	Element.regionOverset
	Element.getComputedRegionStyle(element)
	
	document.getNamedFlow(name)
	document.getNamedFlows()	
		
	NamedFlow.getContent()	
	NamedFlow.getRegions()	
	NamedFlow.getRegionsByContent()	
	NamedFlow.name
	NamedFlow.overset
	NamedFlow.firstEmptyRegionIndex
	
	NamedFlow.regionfragmentchange event
	NamedFlow.regionoversetchange event	

Unsupported features

Some features are however not supported:

CSS:
	
	Basic @region support (styling fragments based on current region)
	
JS:
	
	NamedFlow.getRegionFlowRanges()

Known issues

However, some caveats apply:

  • Because the code is asynchronous, the only way to be sure you can act on a NamedFlow is to listen to its regionfragmentchange event. Unlike the browser which computes the layout of the page synchronously, the JavaScript implementation is asynchronous by nature and cannot perform synchronous operations.
  • Another consequence of the code executing asynchronously is that screen flashing is possible in some cases, especially during the page load if correct display:none styling is not applied to hide the source content wrapper before the content itself is flown into a region. It's also advised to put overflow: hidden on regions when possible even if it shouldn't be strictly required.
  • The regionoversetchange event is not guaranteed to fire only when the overset actually changes. Guaranteeing this would requires storing a lot of information and compare them at runtime, and I decided it would not be worth the time.
  • Dynamic elements cannot be put into a flow without harming their functionnality (this incudes forms, and a lot of interactive objects). This implementation is only suitable for static or mostly static content.
  • In the same vein, hover and active style do not apply to content inside a region. This limitation could possibly be lifted in some cases but I await feedback this is actually useful before proceeding.
  • Because elements are actually cloned in the regions, you may receive those clones as a result of getElementsByTagName or querySelectorAll queries, as well as methods such a elementsFromPoint. The actual ID and class names of the objects are not preserved in the fragments to reduce the risk, but this is by no mean a complete guarantee. A solution is to check the data-css-regions-fragment-of attribute and recover the original source by using the data-css-regions-fragment-source attribute.
  • Because computing nested css-counters manually would be very expensive in cpu horse power, I decided to leave this case as is. Most non-nested css-counters should work fine, however.

Browser support

The polyfill has been tested successfully accross a large range of desktop and mobile browsers. Unsupported browsers include IE8, Opera 12.0 (Presto) and Android Browser 3.0.

For more information, please refer to the documentation at

./documentation/GENERAL_OVERVIEW.md

Feedback

Please report any bug, pull or feature request on this repository, or contact the author by mail via francois.remy.dev@outlook.com. If you have comments on the specification itself, please send your mail to www-style@w3.org and includes [css-regions] in the subject of your mail.

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