🔌 Application Mounter: $mount( )
The $mount function is the entry point of your reactive world. It bridges the gap between your SigPro logic and the browser's Real DOM by injecting a component into the document and initializing its reactive lifecycle.
🛠️ Function Signature
$mount(node: Function | HTMLElement, target?: string | HTMLElement): RuntimeObject| Parameter | Type | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
node | Function or Node | Required | The component function or DOM element to render. |
target | string or Node | document.body | CSS selector or DOM element where the app will live. |
Returns: A Runtime object containing the container and a destroy() method to wipe all reactivity and DOM nodes.
📖 Common Usage Scenarios
1. The SPA Entry Point
In a Single Page Application, you typically mount your main component to the body or a root div. SigPro manages the entire view from that point.
import { $ } from './sigpro.js';
import App from './App.js';
// Mounts your main App component
$mount(App, '#app-root');2. Reactive "Islands"
SigPro is perfect for adding reactivity to static pages. You can mount small widgets into specific parts of an existing HTML layout.
const Counter = () => {
const count = $(0);
return Button({ onclick: () => count(c => c + 1) }, [
"Clicks: ", count
]);
};
// Mount only the counter into a specific sidebar div
$mount(Counter, '#sidebar-widget');🔄 How it Works (Lifecycle & Cleanup)
When $mount is executed, it performs these critical steps to ensure a leak-free environment:
- Duplicate Detection: If you call
$mounton a target that already has a SigPro instance, it automatically calls.destroy()on the previous instance. This prevents "Zombie Effects" from stacking in memory. - Internal Scoping: It executes the component function inside an internal Reactive Owner. This captures every
$watchand event listener created during the render. - Target Injection: It clears the target using
replaceChildren()and appends the new component. - Runtime Creation: It returns a control object:
container: The actual DOM element created.destroy(): The "kill switch" that runs all cleanups, stops all watchers, and removes the element from the DOM.
🛑 Manual Unmounting
While SigPro handles most cleanups automatically (via $if, $for, and $router), you can manually destroy any mounted instance. This is vital for imperatively managed UI like Toasts or Modals.
const instance = $mount(MyToast, '#toast-container');
// Later, to remove the toast and kill its reactivity:
instance.destroy();💡 Summary Cheat Sheet
| Goal | Code Pattern |
|---|---|
| Mount to body | $mount(App) |
| Mount to CSS Selector | $mount(App, '#root') |
| Mount to DOM Node | $mount(App, myElement) |
| Clean & Re-mount | Calling $mount again on the same target |
| Total Cleanup | const app = $mount(App); app.destroy(); |