APL Document (APL 1.6 to 1.7)
(This is not the most recent version of APL. Use the Other Versions option to see the documentation for the most recent version of APL)
An APL document is a JSON object that defines a template to display on a device with a screen. The APL document controls the structure and layout. You send the document to the device with the Alexa.Presentation.APL.RenderDocument
directive.
Sample APL documents
This example shows an APL document that inflates a single Text
component.
{
"type": "APL",
"version": "1.7",
"mainTemplate": {
"item": {
"type": "Text",
"text": "Hello, world"
}
}
}
A richer APL document might include imported packages, resource definitions, style definitions, vector graphics, custom layouts, export information, and background colors.
{
"type": "APL",
"version": "1.7",
"description": "A sample APL document",
"background": "#C87F70",
"import": [
{
"name": "sample-import",
"source": "https://example.com/packages/fictitious-package-import-example",
"version": "1.0"
},
{
"name": "alexa-layouts",
"version": "1.7.0"
}
],
"export": {
"resources": [
"CompanyBlue"
],
"layouts": [
{
"name": "myBody",
"description": "Two stacked text blocks"
}
]
},
"resources": [
{
"colors": {
"CompanyBlue": "#0022f3"
}
}
],
"styles": {
"textBlockStyle": {
"values": [
{
"fontSize": 24,
"color": "@CompanyBlue"
}
]
}
},
"theme": "light",
"graphics": {
"AmazonPlayTrailer": {
"type": "AVG",
"version": "1.2",
"parameters": [
{
"name": "fillColor",
"type": "color",
"default": "black"
}
],
"width": 48,
"height": 48,
"items": {
"type": "path",
"pathData": "M24,2C11.869,2,2,11.869,2,24s9.869,22,22,22s22-9.869,22-22S36.131,2,24,2z M24,44C12.972,44,4,35.028,4,24 C4,12.972,12.972,4,24,4s20,8.972,20,20C44,35.028,35.028,44,24,44z M19,34.799V13.201c0-1.004,1.041-1.563,1.829-0.937 l13.53,10.799c0.604,0.479,0.573,1.394-0.031,1.874L20.845,35.736C20.057,36.362,19,35.804,19,34.799z",
"fillColor": "${fillColor}"
}
}
},
"layouts": {
"myBody": {
"parameters": [
"block1",
"block2"
],
"item": {
"type": "Container",
"direction": "column",
"items": [
{
"type": "Text",
"text": "${block1}",
"style": "textBlockStyle"
},
{
"type": "Text",
"text": "${block2}",
"style": "textBlockStyle"
}
]
}
}
},
"mainTemplate": {
"parameters": [
"myDocumentData"
],
"item": {
"type": "BodyTemplate3",
"title": "${payload.myTitle}",
"scrollItem": {
"type": "myBody",
"block1": "${myDocumentData.myTextBlock1}",
"block2": "${myDocumentData.myTextBlock2}"
}
}
}
}
Document properties
An APL document has the following top-level properties.
Property | Type | Required | Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
No |
Override standard background color | |
|
Map of commands |
No |
Command definitions |
|
String |
No |
An optional description of this document |
|
Map of exports |
No |
An optional list of elements intended to be used by an external package or document. |
|
Array of extensions |
No |
An optional list of APL extensions requested by the document |
|
Map of Alexa Vector Graphics (AVG) |
No |
Vector graphic definitions |
|
Array of keyboard event handlers |
No |
Keyboard event handlers to run when the user presses a key on the keyboard. |
|
Array of keyboard event handlers |
No |
Keyboard event handlers to run when the user releases a key on the keyboard. |
|
Array of tick handlers |
No |
Tick handlers to invoke as time passes. |
|
Array of imports |
No |
A list of references to external APL packages |
|
Map of layouts |
No |
Custom layouts |
|
Layout |
Yes |
The starting layout |
|
Array of commands |
No |
Commands to run when the document configuration changes, such as when a tablet changes orientation from portrait to landscape. |
|
Array of commands |
No |
Command to run when the document is first displayed |
|
No |
Resource definitions | |
|
Map of settings |
No |
Document-wide settings |
|
Map of styles definitions |
No |
Style definitions |
|
String |
No |
Document-specified theme |
|
"APL" |
Yes |
Must be "APL" |
|
"1.7" |
Yes |
Version string of the APL specification. Currently "1.7" |
background
The background property is an optional property that initializes the color of the background as the APL document loads. You can set the background property to either a Color or Gradient. Setting the background to a consistent color or gradient keeps the user experience seamless as Alexa switches between different documents.
Because the device parses and interprets the property before loading packages and resources, you can't reference any resources in the background
property. The data-binding expressions are limited to the properties in the initial data-binding context. The following are examples of valid background specifications:
"background": "darkgreen"
"background": "rgb(10,255,10)"
"background": {
"type": "linear",
"colorRange": [ "darkgreen", "white" ],
"inputRange": [ 0, 0.25 ],
"angle": 90
}
"background": "${viewport.theme == 'dark' ? 'darkgreen' : 'lightgreen'}"
When the background property is not specified, the device displays its the default background color. When the background property is partially transparent, the default background color of the device shows through.
commands
The commands property is an object mapping command name to user-defined command definitions.
export
The export
property identifies the resources, graphics, layouts, and styles defined in the document that you intend for others to use within documents or packages that import this document as a package. The export
property is informational. The APL rendering engine doesn't restrict access to any of the resources, graphics, layouts, or styles defined in a package.
The export
property lets you identify which elements you intend to share and which elements are internal to the package and not intended to be directly used. Verification and authoring tools should use export
information to help the APL author build a well-structured document.
The export
property is a map with the following keys:
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
graphics | Array | [] | An array of names of graphics |
layouts | Array | [] | An array of names of layouts |
resources | Array | [] | An array of names of resources |
styles | Array | [] | An array of names of styles |
Each entry in each of these arrays is an object with the following properties:
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
name | String | REQUIRED | The name of the element |
description | String | "" | An optional description of the exported element |
For convenience, you can shorten an entry without a description to a single string containing the name of the entity.
This example shows the export
property that includes graphics, layouts, resources, and styles:
{
"export": {
"resources": [
{
"name": "CompanyRed",
"description": "Stock color for rendering the company logo"
},
{
"name": "CompanyBlue",
"description": "For people who don't like red"
},
{
"name": "CompanyGreen" // Description omitted
},
"CompanyGray" // May simplify to single string when the description is omitted
],
"layouts": [
{
"name": "MediaControl",
"description": "Media controller with a play and pause button."
}
],
"graphics": [
"PlayButton",
"PauseButton"
],
"styles": [
"PlayButtonStyle",
"PauseButtonStyle"
]
}
}
The properties listed in export
must be defined in the current document.
extensions
The extensions property lists the APL extensions to request. You can request an extension in both documents and packages. List the requested extensions by name and URI in the extensions property.
This example illustrates requesting three extensions. Note that the "remotebutton" and "fishfeeder" extensions shown here are fictitious.
{
"extensions": [
{
"name": "Back",
"uri": "aplext:backstack:10"
},
{
"name": "Button",
"uri": "aplext:remotebutton:13"
},
{
"name": "Fish",
"uri": "aplext:fishfeeder:10"
}
]
}
Each requested extension is a map with the following keys:
Property | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
name |
String | REQUIRED | The local name/namespace of the extension |
uri |
String | REQUIRED | The URI of the requested extension |
The name
property defines how to identify the extension within the APL document. The document uses the name
property in three locations:
- The names and URIs of all requested and provided extensions are exposed as environment properties. Use this property in your document to determine whether a particular extension is available.
- The extension
name
is used a namespace when writing extension event handlers. This lets the document receive events from the extension and act upon those events. - The extension
name
is used as a namespace to run extension commands. This lets the document send a command to the extension. - The extension
name
is used to retrieve settings from thesettings
specific to that extension. This lets the extension configure itself at load time, if needed.
For more about how extensions work and how to interact with extensions, see APL Extensions.
The following extensions are available:
graphics
The graphics
property defines a collection of named vector graphics
you can use within the document. See Alexa Vector Graphics Format for details about the format for vector graphics.
handleKeyDown
An array of keyboard event handlers to run when a key is pressed on the keyboard or when a key auto-repeats. The keyDown event is generated whenever possible; for example pressing the "shift" key should generate a keyDown event.
The event generated has the form:
"event": {
"source": {
"type": "Document",
"handler": "KeyDown",
"id": null, // No value reported
"uid": null, // No value reported
"value": null // No value reported
},
"keyboard": {
"altKey": Boolean
"code": String,
"ctrlKey": Boolean,
"key": String,
"metaKey": Boolean,
"repeat": Boolean,
"shiftKey": Boolean
}
}
For more details on the keyboard
property, refer to the keyboard events documentation.
handleKeyUp
An array of keyboard event handlers to run when a key is released on the keyboard. The keyUp event is generated whenver possible and not just for text entry. For example, releasing the "shift" key on a keyboard should generate a keyUp event.
The event generated has the form:
"event": {
"source": {
"type": "Document",
"handler": "KeyUp",
"id": null, // No value reported
"uid": null, // No value reported
"value": null // No value reported
},
"keyboard": {
"altKey": Boolean
"code": String,
"ctrlKey": Boolean,
"key": String,
"metaKey": Boolean,
"repeat": Boolean,
"shiftKey": Boolean
}
}
For more details on the keyboard
property, refer to the keyboard events documentation.
handleTick
An array of tick event handlers to run as time passes.
The event generated for a tick event handler has the following form.
"event": {
"source": {
"type": "Document",
"handler": "Tick",
"id": null, // No value reported
"uid": null, // No value reported
"value": null // No value reported
}
}
import
The import
property defines a list of named APL packages. You can use the resources, styles, and layouts defined in the imported packages within this document. Specify an array of package references where each entry in the in the list is an object with the following properties.
Property | Type | Required | Description |
---|---|---|---|
name | String | Yes | The name of the Package to import |
version | String | Yes | The version of the Package to import. |
source | URL | No | When provided, a URL from which to download the package. |
The following example illustrates importing the alexa-layouts
package provided in the Alexa Design System for APL, and an external package provided at a URL.
"import": [
{
"name": "alexa-layouts",
"version": "1.7.0"
},
{
"name": "my-own-package",
"source": "https://www.example.com/my-custom-package.json",
"version": "1.0"
}
]
Package imports form a directed dependency graph. Resource, style, and layout lookup is depth-first, following the package import order. For example, assume document A depends on packages B and C, and documents B and C depend on the package D. Then the search order for the definition of a resource is A, B, C, and then D. Therefore, package A can override any of the resources, styles, or layouts defined in B, C, or D. Dependency loops are forbidden.
Packages use one of two mechanisms to download.
- When you provide the
source
property, the document downloads the package from the specified source URL. - When you don't provide the
source
property, the document retrieves the package from an Alexa-supported central repository of packages, using the package name and version properties. For the current set of Amazon-provided packages, see Alexa Design System for APL.
The device runtime software caches packages. The device considers that two packages are identical if their name and version properties match (even if they have specified different source properties). The time to live (TTL) of a package is determined by the TTL received during download.
As you develop and test a package, assign it a unique pre-release or build tag each time you modify the package. This forces the runtime to reload the new version of the package rather than using the cached version during testing.
When you host your own APL packages on a site such as Amazon S3, be sure to enable Cross-Origin Resource Sharing for any APL resources hosted on an HTTPS endpoint.
name
Package names follow the pattern [a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9-]*
.
source
The source
property, if specified, provides the URL location from which to download the package. When not specified, the package is retrieved from an Alexa-supported central repository. For the current set of Amazon-provided packages, see Alexa Design System for APL.
Use https
instead of http
for package source URLs. Many Alexa devices don't support the http
scheme in skill APL documents for security reasons.
version
Package versions should follow the semantic versioning convention given by the grammar:
vers ::= <<release>> <<prerelease>>? <<build>>?
release ::= <<number>> "." <<number>> "." <<number>>
prerelease ::= "-" <<identifier>> ( "." <<identifier>> )*
build ::= "+" <<identifier>> ( "." <<identifier>> )*
identifier ::= [a-zA-Z0-9-]+
number ::= [0-9] | [1-9][0-9]+
Examples of valid package versions include: 10.2.1, 0.1.10-beta.3, and 0.9.7-alpha2.17+build.1002.
layouts
The layouts
property is a map of layout name to layout definition. For details, see APL Layout.
mainTemplate
The mainTemplate
property is the layout to inflate when the document first displays on the screen. You send Alexa the RenderDocument
directive to display your document.
The parameters
array defines properties that bind to the data sources provided in the RenderDocument
directive that inflated the document.
The item
or items
array defines the components or layouts to display. The mainTemplate
uses the single child inflation algorithm to choose the items to display. Therefore, when the array contains multiple components, the document inflates the first component for which when
evalutates to true
. To display multiple components, group them into a single multi-child component.
onConfigChange
The commands to run when the document changes configuration. A change to any of the following properties invokes onConfigChange
:
viewport.height
viewport.width
viewport.theme
viewport.mode
environment.fontScale
environment.screenMode
environment.screenReader
The event generated for the onConfigChange
handler has the following form.
"event": {
"source": {
"type": "Document",
"handler": "ConfigChange",
"id": null, // No value reported
"uid": null, // No value reported
"value": null // No value reported
},
// Viewport properties
"height": INTEGER, // The updated height of the view, in DP
"width": INTEGER, // The updated width of the view, in DP
"theme": STRING, // The updated theme of the view
"viewportMode": STRING, // The updated viewport mode ("auto", "hub", "mobile", etc)
// Configuration properties
"fontScale": NUMBER, // The updated font scaling factor
"screenMode": STRING, // The updated screen mode ("normal" or "high-contrast")
"screenReader": BOOLEAN, // True if the screen reader is turned on
// Synthesized properties
"sizeChanged": BOOLEAN, // True if the width or the height changed value
"rotated": BOOLEAN, // True if the width/height swapped values
}
Note that seven updated properties and two synthesized properties are available in the event. The sizeChanged
property is a Boolean that is true
if the width
or height
changed value. The rotate
property is a Boolean that is true if the width
and height
swap values, such as because the device switched between landscape and portrait orientation.
To reinflate the document on any configuration change, run the Reinflate
command:
{
"type": "APL",
"version": "2024.2",
"onConfigChange": {
"type": "Reinflate"
}
}
To reinflate the document when the screen size changes by a certain amount, add a when
statement to the command and use the properties in the event to determine the new size. The following example reinflates the document when the screen changes by at least 25 percent.
{
"type": "APL",
"version": "2024.2",
"onConfigChange": {
"type": "Reinflate",
"when": "${Math.abs(viewport.width - event.width) > 0.25 * viewport.width || Math.abs(viewport.height - event.height > 0.25 * viewport.height)}"
}
}
You can choose whether to run Reinflate
on a configuration change. Note that the viewport
and environment
properties in the data-binding context are constant values set when a document inflates. If you don't reinflate the document on a configuration change the values in these environment
and viewport
properties might not reflect the actual device configuration.
If you don't run Reinflate
, but want to refer to the most current environment properties, extract the values from the event and store them in a bound variable.
For details about resizing and reinflating options, see Support Tablets and Other Devices that Can Change Size.
The onConfigChange
event handler runs in fast mode.
onMount
The command to run when this document is first displayed on the
screen. This command runs after the component onMount
commands run.
When the device first displays the document on the screen, the following sequence of actions takes place:
- Run in parallel all of the component
onMount
commands. - Run the document
onMount
command.
These commands are effectively gathered into the following meta-command:
{
"type": "Sequential",
"commands": [
{
"type": "Parallel",
"commands": "<COMPONENT_ON_MOUNT_COMMANDS>"
}
],
"finally": "<DOCUMENT_ON_MOUNT_COMMAND>"
}
The reason for this structure is because a touch event or an external
command could be issued against the document while the component onMount
commands
are running. If the event occurs while the component onMount
commands
are running, the component onMount
commands stop and the document onMount
command
runs in fast mode. If the event occurs while the document
onMount
command is running, the document onMount
command stops.
The event generated has the form:
"event": {
"source": {
"type": "Document",
"handler": "Mount",
"id": null, // No value reported
"uid": null, // No value reported
"value": null // No value reported
}
}
resources
The resources property is an array of resource blocks. See Resources.
settings
The settings
property holds a map of key-value pairs that define
document-wide properties. The following properties are defined:
Property | Type | Required | Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
Number |
<system> |
Time before document closes due to inactivity |
|
Boolean |
false |
When true, the APL runtime invokes the |
The following example sets a two minutes default idle timeout.
{ "type": "APL", "version": "1.7", "settings": { "idleTimeout": 120000 } }
The properties in the settings
property aren't accessible through data-binding or elsewhere in the APL document. The the settings
properties provide configuration information to the process displaying the APL document.
idleTimeout
Recommended time in milliseconds that the document should remain on the screen before closing due to inactivity. This value is a recommendation, not a guarantee. Specific devices may choose to ignore or bound the idle timeout value.
supportsResizing
Determines the action to take when the system detects a change in the width
and height
of the screen, such as when the user rotates a tablet to change orientation. Set supportsResizing
to true
to do the following:
- Enable automatic resizing. The APL runtime resizes the layout to fit the new screen size.
- Run the commands in the
onConfigChange
handler. You can use this handler to run commands when using automatic resizing. You can also use this handler to run theReinflate
command.
For details about resizing and reinflating options, see Support Tablets and Other Devices that Can Change Size.
styles
The styles property is an object mapping style name to style definition. See Styles
theme
If specified, the theme
value overrides the viewport.theme
property in the data-binding context. See Viewport object – Theme.
version
The version
property specifies the version of APL that the APL document uses. The version property is used by the APL rendering engine to identify required features and ensure rendering accuracy.
An APL rendering engine should refuse to render a document if it does not support the document's version number. Rendering engines should be backward-compatible. A "1.7" engine also supports "1.6" and earlier documents.
The current version
of the APL specification is "1.7". If a document has an older version number such as "1.0", but tries to use newer features from the 1.1 or later specification (such as the AnimateItem
command), then the rendering behavior is undefined. The rendering engine is only obligated to render the "1.0" features and might ignore newer features.
To create a document that uses newer features, but still works correctly on devices with older versions of APL, wrap the newer features in a conditional block with the environment.aplVersion
property.
{
"when": "${environment.aplVersion == '1.7'}",
"type": "VectorGraphic",
"source": "sample-vector-graphic",
"position": "absolute",
"fillColor": "yellow",
"top": "3vh",
"left": "3vw"
}
Inflation of An APL document
The APL document is inflated into an on-screen display, using the following steps:
1. Put the list of import packages on the package processing queue.
2. For each package on the queue:
-
Add the package to the directed graph of package dependencies
-
Check if the package is available either in the (a) on-device cache, or (b) the packages portion of the directive. If the package is not on-device, use the source value of the import list to download the package from the named URL.
-
Add the packages import list to the package processing queue
3. Construct an initial data-binding context with a viewport
property.
4. Construct an initial set of named resources using the built-in resources for the device.
5. Traversing the directed graph of package dependencies in depth-first order, for each package:
For each resource block in the resources array:
Evaluate the when clause in the current data-binding context. If the when clause evaluates to false, skip this block. Otherwise, if the when clause evaluates to true:
-
Evaluate each boolean in the boolean map and add to the resources
-
Evaluate each color in the colors map and add to the resources
-
Evaluate each number in the numbers map and add to the resources
-
Evaluate each string in the strings map and add to the resources
-
Evaluate each dimension in the dimensions map and add to the resources
6. For each parameter in the mainTemplate:
-
Identify a data source with the same name
-
Update the data-binding context to set that name to the value in the data source.
7. Inflate the mainTemplate following standard layout inflation logic.
Last updated: Feb 29, 2024