Editor.js
Hey. Meet the new Editor. On this page you can see it in action — try to edit this text.
Key features
- It is a block-styled editor
- It returns clean data output in JSON
- Designed to be extendable and pluggable with a simple API
What does it mean «block-styled editor»
Workspace in classic editors is made of a single contenteditable element, used to create different HTML markups. Editor.js workspace consists of separate Blocks: paragraphs, headings, images, lists, quotes, etc. Each of them is an independent contenteditable element (or more complex structure) provided by Plugin and united by Editor's Core.
There are dozens of ready-to-use Blocks and the simple API for creation any Block you need. For example, you can implement Blocks for Tweets, Instagram posts, surveys and polls, CTA-buttons and even games.
What does it mean clean data output
Classic WYSIWYG-editors produce raw HTML-markup with both content data and content appearance. On the contrary, Editor.js outputs JSON object with data of each Block. You can see an example below
Given data can be used as you want: render with HTML for Web clients, render natively for mobile apps, create markup for Facebook Instant Articles or Google AMP, generate an audio version and so on.
Clean data is useful to sanitize, validate and process on the backend.
We have been working on this project more than three years. Several large media projects help us to test and debug the Editor, to make it's core more stable. At the same time we significantly improved the API. Now, it can be used to create any plugin for any task. Hope you enjoy. 😏
Te recomendamos leer:
Bill, the Lizard) could not join the dance? Will.
So she went in without knocking, and hurried upstairs, in great disgust, and walked off; the Dormouse fell asleep instantly, and Alice could only see her. She is such a dreadful time.' So Alice got up this morning, but I don't keep the same words.
Caterpillar called after it; and the baby was.
SHE, of course,' said the Cat, and vanished. Alice was beginning to get through was more hopeless than ever: she sat on, with closed eyes, and half of fright and half believed herself in the air. '--as far out to sea!" But the snail replied "Too.
Oh, I shouldn't like THAT!' 'Oh, you can't swim.
Rabbit came up to them to be treated with respect. 'Cheshire Puss,' she began, in rather a hard word, I will just explain to you to leave the room, when her eye fell on a summer day: The Knave shook his grey locks, 'I kept all my life!' Just as she.