Mini app open source projects

The kbone project (open source on GitHub) implements an adapter that simulates a browser environment in the adaptation layer, so that code written for the web can run without changes in a mini app. Several starter templates (among them Vue, React, and Preact) exist that make the onboarding experience for web developers coming from these frameworks easier.

A new project can be created with the kbone-cli tool. A wizard asks what framework to initiate the project with. The code snippet below shows the Preact demo. In the code snippet below, the mp command builds the mini app, the web command builds the web app, and build creates the production web app.

npx kbone-cli init my-app
cd
my-app
npm run mp
npm run web
npm run build

The code snippet below shows a simple counter component that then gets isomorphically rendered in a mini app and a web app. The overhead of the mini app is significant, purely judging from the DOM structure.

import { h, Component } from "preact";
import "./index.css";

class Counter extends Component {
  state
= { count: 1 };

  sub
= () => {
   
this.setState((prevState) => {
     
return { count: --prevState.count };
   
});
 
};

  add
= () => {
   
this.setState((prevState) => {
     
return { count: ++prevState.count };
   
});
 
};

  clickHandle
= () => {
   
if ("undefined" != typeof wx && wx.getSystemInfoSync) {
      wx
.navigateTo({
        url
: "../log/index?id=1",
     
});
   
} else {
      location
.href = "log.html";
   
}
 
};

  render
({}, { count }) {
   
return (
     
<div>
       
<button onClick={this.sub}>-</button>
       
<span>{count}</span>
       
<button onClick={this.add}>+</button>
       
<div onClick={this.clickHandle}>跳转</div>
     
</div>
   
);
 
}
}

export default Counter;
The Preact kbone template demo app opened in WeChat DevTools. Inspecting the DOM structure shows a significant overhead compared to the web app.
The Preact kbone template demo app opened in WeChat DevTools. Note the complex DOM structure and how the plus and minus buttons are actually not <button> elements.
The Preact kbone template demo app opened in the web browser. Inspecting the DOM structure shows the to-be-expected markup based on the Preact component code.
The Preact kbone template demo app opened in the web browser. Note the DOM structure.

kbone-ui

The kbone-ui project (open source on GitHub) is a UI framework that facilitates both mini app development as well as Vue.js development with kbone. The kbone-ui components emulate the look and feel of WeChat's built-in mini app components (also see Components above). A demo that runs directly in the browser lets you explore the available components.

Demo of the kbone-ui framework showing form-related components like radio buttons, switches, inputs, and labels.
The kbone-ui demo showing form-related components.

WeUI

WeUI is a set of basic style libraries consistent with WeChat's default visual experience. The official WeChat design team has tailored designs for WeChat internal web pages and WeChat mini apps to make users' perception of use more uniform. It includes components such as button, cell, dialog, progress, toast, article, actionsheet, and icon. There are different versions of WeUI available like weui-wxss for WeChat mini apps styled with WXSS (see Styling above), weui.js for web apps, and react-weui for WeChat React components.

Demo of the WeUI framework showing form-related components, namely switches.
The WeUI demo app showing switches.

Omi

Omi is a self-proclaimed frontend cross-frameworks framework (open source on GitHub. It merges Web Components, JSX, Virtual DOM, functional style, observer or Proxy into one framework with tiny size and high performance. Its aim is to let developers write components once and use them everywhere, such as Omi, React, Preact, Vue.js, or Angular. Writing Omi components is very intuitive and free of almost all boilerplate.

import { render, WeElement, define } from "omi";

define
("my-counter", class extends WeElement {
  data
= {
    count
: 1,
 
};

 
static css = `
    span
{
        color
: red;
   
}`;

  sub
= () => {
   
this.data.count--;
   
this.update();
 
};

  add
= () => {
   
this.data.count++;
   
this.update();
 
};

  render
() {
   
return (
     
<div>
       
<button onClick={this.sub}>-</button>
       
<span>{this.data.count}</span>
       
<button onClick={this.add}>+</button>
     
</div>
    );
  }
});

render(<my-counter /
>, "body");

Omiu

Omiu is a cross framework UI component library (open source on GitHub) developed based on Omi, which outputs custom elements of standard web components.

Demo of the Omiu framework showing form-related components, namely switches.
The Omiu demo app showing switches.

WePY

WePY is a framework that allows mini apps to support componentized development. Through pre-compilation, developers can choose their favorite development style to develop mini apps. The detailed optimization of the framework and the introduction of Promises and async functions all make the development of mini app projects easier and more efficient. At the same time, WePY is also a growing framework, which has largely absorbed some optimized frontend tools and framework design concepts and ideas, mostly from Vue.js.

<style lang="less">
 
@color: #4d926f;
 
.num {
   
color: @color;
 
}
</style>

<template>
 
<div class="container">
   
<div class="num" @tap="num++">{{num}}</div>
   
<custom-component></custom-component>
   
<vendor-component></vendor-component>
   
<div>{{text}}</div>
   
<input v-model="text" />
 
</div>
</template>

<config>
  { usingComponents: { customComponent: '@/components/customComponent', vendorComponent:
  'module:vendorComponent' } }
</config>

<script>
 
import wepy from "@wepy/core";

  wepy
.page({
    data
: {
      num
: 0,
      text
: "Hello World",
   
},
 
});
</script>
WePY 'getting started' documentation page showing the first steps to get going.
WePY "getting started" documentation.

vConsole

The vConsole project provides a lightweight, extendable frontend developer tool for mobile web pages. It offers a DevTools-like debugger that can be injected directly into web apps and mini apps. A demo showcases the opportunities. The vConsole includes tabs for logs, system, network, elements, and storage.

vConsole demo app. The vConsole opens at the bottom and has tabs for logs, system, network, elements, and storage.
vConsole demo app showing the elements explorer.

weweb

The weweb project (open source on GitHub) is the underlying frontend framework of the Hera mini app framework that claims to be compatible with the syntax of WeChat mini apps, so you can write web applications in the way of mini apps. The documentation promises that if you already have a mini app, you can run it in the browser thanks to weweb. In my experiments, this did not work reliably for current mini apps, most probably because the project has not seen updates recently leading its compiler to miss changes in the WeChat platform.

Documentation of the Hera mini app framework listing the WeChat APIs that it supports like `wx.request`, `wx.uploadFile`, etc.
Hera mini app framework documentation showing the list of supported WeChat APIs.
The weweb demo mini app compiled with weweb to run in the browser showing form elements.
The weweb demo mini app compiled with weweb to run in the browser.

Acknowledgements

This article was reviewed by Joe Medley, Kayce Basques, Milica Mihajlija, Alan Kent, and Keith Gu.