, sets the "foo" attribute to "bar", then removes it again
// Special keys:
html.div(dataset: {foo: 1, bar: 2})
// Creates a
with the attributes "data-foo" and "data-bar" set to 1 and 2
html.div(style: {color: 'red'})
// Creates a
with the "style" attribute set to "color: red"
```
Generators can be called with many arguments. Arrays get iterated recursively as
if they were part of a flat argument list.
## A few more examples:
Create a Button that deletes itself:
```js
document.body.append(
html.button("Delete Me", {click: event => event.target.remove()})
)
```
Turn a two-dimensional array into an HTML table:
```js
const table = rows =>
html.table(html.tbody(rows.map(
row => html.tr(row.map(
cell => html.rd(cell, {dataset: {
content: cell.toLowerCase(),
}})
))
)))
```
A list that you can add items to
```js
let list, input = ""
document.body.append(html.div([
list=html.ul(),
html.input({type: 'text', input: e => input = e.target.value}),
html.button({click: event => list.append(html.li(input))}, "Add"),
]))
```
A list that you can also delete items from
```js
const listItem = content => html.li(
html.span(content), " ", html.a("[remove]", {
click: event => event.target.closest("li").remove(),
style: { cursor: 'pointer', color: 'red' },
})
)
let list, input = ""
document.body.append(html.div([
list=html.ul(),
html.input({type: 'text', input: e => input = e.target.value}),
html.button({click: event => list.append(listItem(input))}, "Add"),
]))
```