Step 4: Open External Links With a Webview

Published on Updated on

Caution

Important: Chrome will be removing support for Chrome Apps on all platforms. Chrome browser and the Chrome Web Store will continue to support extensions. Read the announcement and learn more about migrating your app.

Want to start fresh from here? Find the previous step's code in the reference code zip under cheat_code > solution_for_step3.

In this step, you will learn:

  • How to show external web content inside your app in a secure and sandboxed way.

Estimated time to complete this step: 10 minutes.
To preview what you will complete in this step, jump down to the bottom of this page ↓.

Learn about the webview tag

Some applications need to present external web content directly to the user but keep them inside the application experience. For example, a news aggregator might want to embed the news from external sites with all the formatting, images, and behavior of the original site. For these and other usages, Chrome Apps have a custom HTML tag called webview.

The Todo app using a webview

Webviews are sandboxed processes: The enclosing Chrome App (also known as the "embedder page") cannot easily access the webview's loaded DOM. You can only interact with the webview using its API.

Implement the webview tag

Update the Todo app to search for URLs in the todo item text and create a hyperlink. The link, when clicked, opens a new Chrome App window (not a browser tab) with a webview presenting the content.

Update permissions

In manifest.json, request the webview permission:

"permissions": [
"storage",
"alarms",
"notifications",
"webview"
],

Create a webview embedder page

Create a new file in the root of your project folder and name it webview.html. This file is a basic webpage with one <webview> tag:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
</head>
<body>
<webview style="width: 100%; height: 100%;"></webview>
</body>
</html>

Parse for URLs in todo items

At the end of controller.js, add a new method called _parseForURLs():

  Controller.prototype._getCurrentPage = function () {
return document.location.hash.split('/')[1];
};

Controller.prototype._parseForURLs = function (text) {
var re = /(https?:\/\/[^\s"<>,]+)/g;
return text.replace(re, '<a href="$1" data-src="$1">$1</a>');
};

// Export to window
window.app.Controller = Controller;
})(window);

Whenever a string starting with "http://" or "https://" is found, a HTML anchor tag is created to wrap around the URL.

Find showAll() in controller.js. Update showAll() to parse for links by using the _parseForURLs() method added previously:

/**
* An event to fire on load. Will get all items and display them in the
* todo-list
*/

Controller.prototype.showAll = function () {
this.model.read(function (data) {
this.$todoList.innerHTML = this.view.show(data);
this.$todoList.innerHTML = this._parseForURLs(this.view.show(data));
}.bind(this));
};

Do the same for showActive() and showCompleted():

/**
* Renders all active tasks
*/

Controller.prototype.showActive = function () {
this.model.read({ completed: 0 }, function (data) {
this.$todoList.innerHTML = this.view.show(data);
this.$todoList.innerHTML = this._parseForURLs(this.view.show(data));
}.bind(this));
};

/**
* Renders all completed tasks
*/

Controller.prototype.showCompleted = function () {
this.model.read({ completed: 1 }, function (data) {
this.$todoList.innerHTML = this.view.show(data);
this.$todoList.innerHTML = this._parseForURLs(this.view.show(data));
}.bind(this));
};

And finally, add _parseForURLs() to editItem():

Controller.prototype.editItem = function (id, label) {
...
var onSaveHandler = function () {
...
// Instead of re-rendering the whole view just update
// this piece of it
label.innerHTML = value;
label.innerHTML = this._parseForURLs(value);
...
}.bind(this);
...
}

Still in editItem(), fix the code so that it uses the innerText of the label instead of the label's innerHTML:

Controller.prototype.editItem = function (id, label) {
...
// Get the innerHTML of the label instead of requesting the data from the
// Get the innerText of the label instead of requesting the data from the
// ORM. If this were a real DB this would save a lot of time and would avoid
// a spinner gif.
input.value = label.innerHTML;
input.value = label.innerText;
...
}

Open new window containing webview

Add a _doShowUrl() method to controller.js. This method opens a new Chrome App window via chrome.app.window.create() with webview.html as the window source:

  Controller.prototype._parseForURLs = function (text) {
var re = /(https?:\/\/[^\s"<>,]+)/g;
return text.replace(re, '<a href="$1" data-src="$1">$1</a>');
};

Controller.prototype._doShowUrl = function(e) {
// only applies to elements with data-src attributes
if (!e.target.hasAttribute('data-src')) {
return;
}
e.preventDefault();
var url = e.target.getAttribute('data-src');
chrome.app.window.create(
'webview.html',
{hidden: true}, // only show window when webview is configured
function(appWin) {
appWin.contentWindow.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded',
function(e) {
// when window is loaded, set webview source
var webview = appWin.contentWindow.
document.querySelector('webview');
webview.src = url;
// now we can show it:
appWin.show();
}
);
});
};

// Export to window
window.app.Controller = Controller;
})(window);

In the chrome.app.window.create() callback, note how the webview's URL is set via the src tag attribute.

Lastly, add a click event listener inside the Controller constructor to call doShowUrl() when a user clicks on a link:

function Controller(model, view) {
...
this.router = new Router();
this.router.init();

this.$todoList.addEventListener('click', this._doShowUrl);

window.addEventListener('load', function () {
this._updateFilterState();
}.bind(this));
...
}

Launch your finished Todo app

You are done Step 4! If you reload your app and add a todo item with a full URL starting with http:// or https://, you should see something like this:

For more information

For more detailed information about some of the APIs introduced in this step, refer to:

Ready to continue onto the next step? Go to Step 5 - Add images from the web »

Updated on Improve article

This site uses cookies to deliver and enhance the quality of its services and to analyze traffic. If you agree, cookies are also used to serve advertising and to personalize the content and advertisements that you see. Learn more about our use of cookies.