1. Introduction
This spec is intentionally a rough sketch at the moment. It should contain all the details necessary to evaluate the proposal, but is intentionally avoiding precise algorithms at the moment, to aid in easy comprehension and to, hopefully, discourage implementation from this sketch.
Shadow DOM allows authors to separate their page into "components", subtrees of markup whose details are only relevant to the component itself, not the outside page. This reduces the chance of a style meant for one part of the page accidentally over-applying and making a different part of the page look wrong. However, this styling barrier also makes it harder for a page to interact with its components when it actually wants to do so.
This specification defines the ::part() and ::theme() pseudo-elements, which allow an author to style specific, purposely exposed elements in a shadow tree from the outside page’s context. In combination with custom properties , which let the outside page pass particular values (such as theme colors) into the component for it to do with as it will, these pseudo-elements allow components and the outside page to interact in safe, powerful ways, maintaining encapsulation without surrending all control.
1.1. Motivation
For obvious reasons, it’s valuable to let the outside page style the internals of a shadow tree, at least in some limited ways. (The ubiquity of UA-specific pseudo-elements for the various input elements shows this.)
The previous proposed method for doing so, the >>> combinator, turned out to be too powerful for its own good; it exposed too much of a component’s internal structure to scrutiny, defeating some of the encapsulation benefits that using Shadow DOM brings. For this, and other performance-related reasons, the >>> combinator was eventually removed from the live profile .
This left us with using custom properties as the only way to style into a shadow tree: the component would advertise that it uses certain custom properties to style its internals, and the outer page could then set those properties as it wished on the shadow host , letting inheritance push the values down to where they were needed. This works very well for many simple theming use-cases.
However, there are some cases where this falls down. If a component wishes to allow arbitrary styling of something in its shadow tree, the only way to do so is to define hundreds of custom properties (one per CSS property they wish to allow control of), which is obviously ridiculous for both usability and performance reasons. The situation is compounded if authors wish to style the component differently based on pseudo-classes like :hover ; the component needs to duplicate the custom properties used for each pseudo-class (and each combination, like :hover:focus , resulting in a combinatorial explosion). This makes the usability and performance problems even worse.
We introduce ::part() to handle this case much more elegantly and performantly. Rather than bundling everything into custom property names, the functionality lives in selectors and style rule syntax, like it’s meant to. This is far more usable for both component authors and component users, should have much better performance, and allows for better encapsulation/API surface.
Another interesting facet of using custom properties , however, is that inheritance doesn’t stop at the first shadow tree. Unless explicitly blocked, a custom property inherits down thru nested trees, allowing authors to style deeply nested components as easily as they style directly-visible ones. The same considerations apply to this case, so we introduce ::theme() to handle this.
It’s important to note that ::part() and ::theme() offer absolutely zero new theoretical power . They are not a rehash of the >>> combinator, they’re simply a more convenient and consistent syntax for something authors can already do with custom properties . By separating out the explicitly "published" parts of an element (the shadow part map from the sub-parts that it merely happens to contain (the computed shadow theme map , it also helps with encapsulation, as authors can use ::part() without fear of accidental over-styling.
2. Exposing a Shadow Element:
Each shadow root has a shadow part map which is an ordered map , with keys that are strings and values that are ordered sets of elements.The shadow part map contains all the entries named or forwarded by the elements in its shadow tree , as described below.
Factor this out into an algorithm.
The value in the map is a set of elements, not individual elements; need to properly append.
2.1.
Naming
a
Shadow
Element:
the
part
attribute
Any
element
in
a
shadow
tree
can
have
a
part
attribute.
This
is
used
to
expose
the
element
outside
the
shadow
tree
,
and
to
"forward"
sub-parts
of
the
element
(if
it
has
its
own
shadow
tree
)
to
outside
the
shadow
tree
.
The
part
attribute
is
parsed
as
a
comma-separated
space-separated
list
of
part
mappings.
names.
Each
part
mapping
is
one
of:
name
is:
-
ident
-
Adds «[ ident → el ]» to the shadow part map of the shadow root containing
el.the element. - anything else
Ignored for error-recovery / future compat.
Note: It’s okay to give a part multiple names. The "part name" should be considered similar to a class, not an id or tagname.
2.2.
Forwarding
a
Shadow
Element:
the
partmap
attribute
Any
element
in
a
shadow
tree
can
have
a
partmap
attribute.
If
the
element
is
a
shadow
host,
this
is
used
to
expose
elements
from
inside
this
host’s
shadow
tree
to
outside
this
host’s
containing
shadow
tree
.The partmap attribute is parsed as a comma-separated list of part mappings. Each part mapping is one of:
-
ident1 => ident2
-
If el is a shadow host , and it’s shadow root’s shadow part map partMap contains ident1, then this adds «[ ident2 → partMap [ident1] ]» to the shadow part map of the shadow root containing el.
-
ident
Is equivalent to
ident => ident
.* => prefix*
-
If el is a shadow host , then for each ident → subEl in el’s shadow root’s shadow part map , «[ prefix + ident → subEl ]» is added to the shadow part map of the shadow root containing el.
- anything else
-
Ignored for error-recovery / future compat.
When doing prefixed-wildcard forwarding, should probably automatically exclude sub-parts that are manually forwarded. With that, would be good to have a syntax to block forwarding of a sub-part (currently would require `foo => nonsense-name`).
Note:
It’s
okay
to
give
a
part
multiple
names,
or
map
a
sub-part
to
several
names.
The
"part
name"
should
be
considered
similar
to
a
class,
not
an
id
or
tagname.
Each
shadow
root
has
a
shadow
part
map
which
is
an
ordered
map
,
with
keys
that
are
strings
and
values
that
are
ordered
sets
of
elements.
2.1.
2.3.
Exposing
More
Widely:
the
theme
attribute
In
addition
to
the
shadow
part
map
,
every
shadow
root
has
a
partial
shadow
theme
map
and
a
computed
shadow
theme
map
both
of
which
are
ordered
maps
(with
the
same
key/value
shape
as
the
shadow
part
map
),
and
the
elements
in
the
shadow
tree
have
a
corresponding
theme
attribute.
The
theme
attribute
is
parsed
and
interpreted
identically
to
the
part
attribute,
except
that
it
adds
its
entries
to
the
shadow
root’s
partial
shadow
theme
map
instead.
If
the
shadow
root’s
mode
is
"closed"
,
the
computed
shadow
theme
map
is
identical
to
the
partial
shadow
theme
map
.
Otherwise,
it’s
the
union
of
the
partial
shadow
theme
map
with
the
computed
shadow
theme
maps
of
every
shadow
host’s
shadow
root
in
its
shadow
tree
.
3. Selecting a Shadow Element: the ::part() and ::theme() pseudo-elements
The
::part()
and
::theme()
pseudo-elements
(collectively,
the
shadow-part
pseudo-elements
)
allow
you
to
select
elements
that
have
been
exposed
via
a
part
attribute.
The
syntaxes
of
them
are:
::part() = ::part( <ident> ) ::theme() = ::theme( <ident> )
The ::part() pseudo-element only matches anything when the originating element is a shadow host . If the originating element’s shadow root’s shadow part map contains the specified <ident> , ::part() matches the element or elements keyed to that <ident> . Otherwise, it matches nothing.
part="label"
),
you
can
select
it
with
#the-button::part(label)
.
The ::theme() pseudo-element is similar, except it can match regardless of whether the originating element is a shadow host or not. It matches the elements keyed to the specified <ident> in the computed shadow theme map of the shadow trees of the originating element or any descendants.
part="label"
anywhere
in
the
entire
document,
no
matter
how
deeply
nested
into
shadow
trees
they
are.
The shadow-part pseudo-elements can take additional pseudo-classes after them, such as x-button::part(label):hover , but never match the structural pseudo-classes or any other pseudo-classes that match based on tree information rather than local element information.
The shadow-part pseudo-elements also can take additional pseudo-elements after them, such as x-button::part(label)::before , but never match additional shadow-part pseudo-elements .
One can still target the nested label with a selector like x-panel::theme(label) . However, this will also select the labels of any other buttons in the panel.
If
the
<x-panel>
’s
internal
confirm
button
had
used
something
like
part="confirm-button,
*
=>
confirm-*"
to
forward
the
button’s
internal
parts
up
into
the
panel’s
own
shadow
part
map
,
then
a
selector
like
x-panel::part(confirm-label)
would
select
just
the
one
button’s
label,
ignoring
any
other
labels.