Client-side rendering in AMP
Important: this documentation is not applicable to your currently selected format ads!
This guide outlines client-side rendering possibilities in AMP. By default, AMP pages are server-side rendered. However, in certain cases it's necessary to dynamically render data, such as a list of articles or items in a user’s shopping cart.
Rendering on page load
Although its name may be misleading, amp-list
is the go-to solution for client-side rendering in AMP. The amp-list component works in a wide range of client-side rendering needs. It can render a single item or provide infinite scrolling and pagination. It allows dynamic content rendering on page load and can update that content after a user interacts with the page. Use the default loading indicator, or build your own, for the best UX, especially when fetching from a remote endpoint.
The amp-list component uses a remote JSON endpoint, a local amp-state element, or a local amp-script element, to render dynamic content on page load. Default use of amp-list requires each JSON to have an items array.
<amp-state id="weekdays">
<script type="application/json">
{
"items": [
"Monday",
"Tuesday",
"Wednesday",
"Thursday",
"Friday",
"Saturday",
"Sunday"
]
}
</script>
</amp-state>
<amp-list layout="fixed-height"
height="126"
src="amp-state:weekdays"
binding="no">
<template type="amp-mustache">
{{.}}
</template>
</amp-list>
This is adjustable through use of the single-item
and items
attributes.
<amp-list layout="fixed-height"
height="18"
src="/documentation/examples/api/time"
binding="no"
single-item
items=".">
<template type="amp-mustache">
The time is: {{time}}
</template> </amp-list>
AMP render's content using amp-mustache
templates.
For the best user experience, and to remain AMP-valid, you must predefine the height of rendered content. This can be done with the following layouts:
responsive
fill
fixed-height
fixed
flex-item
A best practice is to use the fixed-height
layout attribute on the amp-list element.
To avoid blank space while content is loading, display a placeholder within the amp-list
component.
<amp-list height="32" width="80"
src="/login-button"
binding="no"
items="."
single-item>
<template type="amp-mustache">
{{#loggedIn}}
<button>Logout</button>
{{/loggedIn}}
{{^loggedIn}}
<button>Login</button>
{{#loggedIn}}
</template>
<button disabled placeholder>Login</button>
</amp-list>
If using multiple amp-list
implementations, a best practice is to use a single fetch and share the data.
Render from a JSON endpoint
When rendering from a JSON endpoint, and not a local amp-state element, include the binding
attribute and set it to no
.
<amp-list layout="fixed-height"
height="100"
src="/static/samples/json/examples.json"
binding="no">
<template type="amp-mustache">
<div><a href="{{url}}">{{title}}</a></div>
</template>
</amp-list>
If binding="no"
is not specified, amp-list defaults to binding="always"
. This means bindings are executed on page load, causing AMP to block the render and slow your page.
Rendering on page load from amp-state
Using amp-list enables state rendering from amp-bind on page load. You can render data from a local amp-state element on page load by using the amp-state prefix in the src attribute value.
<amp-state
id="hikes">
<script type="application/json">
{
"items": [
{
"title": "Coastal Sights",
"city": "San Francisco",
"length": "9.3 Miles",
"hikeUrl": "/coast",
"credit": "Photo by Joseph Barrientos",
"imageUrl": "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1449034446853-66c86144b0ad?ixlib=rb-1.2.1&ixid=eyJhcHBfaWQiOjEyMDd9&auto=format&fit=crop&w=800&q=60",
"altDescription": "Photo of the Golden Gate Bridge."
},
{
"title": "Through the Park",
"city": "San Francisco",
"length": "5 Miles",
"hikeUrl": "/park",
"credit": "Photo by Claudia Lorusso",
"imageUrl": "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1565086565717-351194b2488b?ixlib=rb-1.2.1&ixid=eyJhcHBfaWQiOjEyMDd9&auto=format&fit=crop&w=2850&q=80",
"altDescription": "Photo of the Academy of Sciences in Golden Gate Park."
},
{
"title": "Historic Brownstones",
"city": "New York City",
"length": "1.2 Miles",
"hikeUrl": "#",
"credit": "Photo by Rachel Martin",
"imageUrl": "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1542042238232-3a0b14425b71?ixlib=rb-1.2.1&ixid=eyJhcHBfaWQiOjEyMDd9&auto=format&fit=crop&w=2850&q=80",
"altDescription": "Photo of Brownstone building in New York City."
},
{
"title": "Big Apple, Big Bites",
"city": "New York City",
"length": "3.2 Miles",
"hikeUrl": "#",
"credit": "Photo by Peter Bond",
"imageUrl": "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1515711127392-4c62a99c3393?ixlib=rb-1.2.1&ixid=eyJhcHBfaWQiOjEyMDd9&auto=format&fit=crop&w=2854&q=80",
"altDescription": "Photo of a diner."
}
]
}
</script>
</amp-state>
<amp-list
width="auto"
height="300"
layout="fixed-height"
src="amp-state:hikes"
[src]="hikes"
binding="always"
reset-on-refresh>
<template type="amp-mustache">
<div class="hike-display">
<amp-img src="{{imageUrl}}" width="300" height="225" alt="{{altDescription}}"></amp-img>
<br />
<span class="image-credit">{{credit}}</span>
<br />
<a class="hike-title" href="{{hikeUrl}}">{{title}}</a>
<br />
<span class="image-credit">{{city}}</span>
</div>
</template>
<div overflow class="list-overflow" style="background-color:red;">
See more
</div>
</amp-list>
Read more about this implementation in The value of amp-list initialization from state blog post.
Customized solution with amp-script
For client-side rendering that requires customized logic, amp-script is available. It allows custom JavaScript and supports use of an additional UI library. Similar to amp-list
, you can only render content on the page with amp-script if the layout height is known in advance.
Rendering after user-interaction
You may change an amp-list component’s JSON endpoint or amp-state variable after user interaction through amp-bind. This allows fresh content rendering after a user interacts with your page.
<button on="tap:AMP.setState({
colors: ['red', 'blue', 'green', 'yellow']
})">Add list content</button>
<amp-list width="0"
height="0"
[src]="colors"
[is-layout-container]="true"
items="."
binding="no">
<template type="amp-mustache">
{{.}}
</template>
</amp-list>
Changing the content displayed within an amp-list component may require a change in size. Using the [is-layout-container]
bindable attribute changes the layout to container
, allowing amp-list’s children to define its size.
Updating live content without user interaction
The amp-live-list
component provides a wrapper and minimal UI to update content live. Some cases of rendering live content may require more customization than amp-live-list provides. In these cases, amp-script
allows complex logic and can use additional UI libraries, such a Preact or Vue.js and use of the WebSocket API.
However, rendering live content with amp-script comes with a few restrictions. This approach allows the creation of any non-AMP elements, but only the amp-img
and amp-layout
components. You may work around this by writing updates to amp-state and rendering via amp-list.
Personalization with amp-access
The amp-access
component allows personalization of page content. This data is provided via a JSON endpoint, which uses amp-mustache to update page content.
The biggest advantage of amp-access
is the lack of layout restrictions. This gives a lot of flexibility, but you must ensure it doesn’t lead to content jump. This could hurt your Web Vital score.
Rendering form responses
The amp-form
component allows a client-rendering JSON response. Used with amp-mustache
, forms are able to communicate submit success and failure.
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Written by @CrystalOnScript
with contributions from @sbenz