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A complex SAAS starter kit using Go, the html/template package, and sprinkles of javascript.

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adnaan/gomodest-starter

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GOMODEST is a Multi Page App(MPA) starter kit using Go's html/template, SvelteJS and StimulusJS. It is inspired from modest approaches to building webapps as enlisted in https://modestjs.works/.

Motivation

I am a devops engineer who dabbles in UI for side projects, internal tools and such. The SPA/ReactJS ecosystem is too costly for me. This is an alternative approach.

The main idea is to use server rendered html with spots of client-side dynamism using SvelteJS & StimulusJS

The webapp is mostly plain old javascript, html, css but with sprinkles of StimulusJS & spots of SvelteJS used for interactivity sans page reloads. StimulusJS is used for sprinkling interactivity in server rendered html & mounting Svelte components into divs.

Stack

A few things which were used:

  1. Go, html/template, goview,
  2. Authentication: github.com/adnaan/authn
  3. SvelteJS
  4. Hotwire
  5. Bulma CSS

Many more things in go.mod & web/package.json

To run, clone this repo and:

$ make install
# another terminal
$ make run-go

The ideas in this starter kit follow the JS gradient as noted here. I have taken the liberty to organise them into the following big blocks: server-rendered html, sprinkles and spots.

Server Rendered HTML

Use html/template and goview to render html pages. It's quite powerful when do you don't need client-side interactions.

example:

func accountPage(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) (goview.M, error) {

	session, err := store.Get(r, "auth-session")
	if err != nil {
		return nil, fmt.Errorf("%v, %w", err, InternalErr)
	}

	profileData, ok := session.Values["profile"]
	if !ok {
		return nil, fmt.Errorf("%v, %w", err, InternalErr)
	}

	profile, ok := profileData.(map[string]interface{})
	if !ok {
		return nil, fmt.Errorf("%v, %w", err, InternalErr)
	}

	return goview.M{
		"name": profile["name"],
	}, nil

}

Sprinkles

Use stimulusjs to level up server-rendered html to handle simple interactions like: navigations, form validations etc.

example:

    <button class="button is-primary is-outlined is-fullwidth"
            data-action="click->navigate#goto"
            data-goto="/  "
            type="button">
        Home
    </button>
    goto(e){
        if (e.currentTarget.dataset.goto){
            window.location = e.currentTarget.dataset.goto;
        }
    }

Spots

Use sveltejs to take over spots of a server-rendered html page to provide more complex interactivity without page reloads.

This snippet is the most interesting part of this project:

{{define "content"}}
    <div class="columns is-mobile is-centered">
        <div class="column is-half-desktop">
            <div
                    data-target="svelte.component"
                    data-component-name="app"
                    data-component-props="{{.Data}}">
            </div>
        </div>
    </div>
    </div>
{{end}}

source

In the above snippet, we use StimulusJS to mount a Svelte component by using the following code:

     import { Controller } from "stimulus";
     import components from "./components";
     
     export default class extends Controller {
         static targets = ["component"]
         connect() {
             if (this.componentTargets.length > 0){
                 this.componentTargets.forEach(el => {
                     const componentName = el.dataset.componentName;
                     const componentProps = el.dataset.componentProps ? JSON.parse(el.dataset.componentProps): {};
                     if (!(componentName in components)){
                         console.log(`svelte component: ${componentName}, not found!`)
                         return;
                     }
                     const app = new components[componentName]({
                         target: el,
                         props: componentProps
                     });
                 })
             }
         }
     }

source

This strategy allows us to mix server rendered HTML pages with client side dynamism.

Other possibly interesting aspects could be the layout of web/html and the usage of the super nice goview library to render html in these files:

  1. router.go
  2. view.go
  3. pages.go

That is all.


Attributions

  1. https://areknawo.com/making-a-todo-app-in-svelte/
  2. https://modestjs.works/
  3. https://github.com/foolin/goview