⚠️ These components are still a work in progress. Not all elements are available on NPM yet. We are working on the remaining elements and publish them to the NPM registry once we have a first working version.⚠️
Material Web Components helps developers execute Material Design using web components.
Built on top of the Material Components Web project and LitElement, the Material Web Components enable a reliable development workflow to build beautiful and functional web projects.
Web Components can be seamlessly incorporated into a wide range of usage contexts. Whether you're already heavily invested in another framework or not, it's easy to incorporate Material Web Components into your site in a lightweight, idiomatic fashion.
Note: This guide assumes you have npm installed locally.
The easiest way to try out the Material Web Components is to use one of these online tools:
-
Runs in all supported browsers: Glitch
-
Runs in browsers with JavaScript Modules: JSBin, CodePen.
Or you can also copy this HTML file into a local file and run it in any browser that supports JavaScript Modules.
When you're ready to use the Material Web Components in your web application:
-
Ensure the webcomponents polyfills are included in your HTML page
-
Install webcomponents polyfills
npm i @webcomponents/webcomponentsjs
-
Add webcomponents polyfills to your HTML page
<script src="@webcomponents/webcomponentsjs/webcomponents-loader.js"></script>
-
-
Add one of the MWC elements to your project, for example for icon:
npm i @material/mwc-icon
-
Import the element definition into your HTML page:
<script type="module" src="@material/mwc-icon/index.js"></script>
Or into your module script:
import {Icon} from "@material/mwc-icon"
-
Create an instance of element in your HTML page, or via any framework that supports rendering Custom Elements:
<mwc-icon>sentiment_very_satisfied</mwc-icon>
-
Install the Polymer CLI:
npm i -g polymer-cli
-
Run the development server and open a browser pointing to its URL:
polymer serve
The Material Web Components are published on npm using JavaScript Modules. This means it can take advantage of the standard native JavaScript module loader available in all current major browsers.
However, since the Material Web Components use npm convention to reference dependencies by name, a light transform to rewrite specifiers to URLs is required to get it to run in the browser. The polymer-cli's development server
polymer serve
automatically handles this transform.
Tools like WebPack and Rollup can also be used to serve and/or bundle.
Below are instructions for setting up project development.
- Clone this repo with
git clone
. - Install dependencies by running
npm run bootstrap
- Run a development server with
npm run dev
- View the demos by accessing
<dev server url>
/demos/index.html - This will also build the project.
- View the demos by accessing
- Build the project with
npm run build
- Run tests with
npm run test
Components are written in Typescript, and compiled to Javascript Modules.
The output Javascript Modules can be used in every modern browser directly, and are supported a wide variety of popular bundler and build tools.
The components render output structure, handle styling, and manage data flow with lit-html
while integrating with Material Design's common logic library for each component.
Components define their styling using SASS.
The SASS output is built into a javascript module which exports the component's styling as a lit-html template.
Component styling is compiled with both npm run build
and npm run watch
.
To compile the component SASS manually, use npm run build-styling
- All Components
- Demos
- Contributing
- Material.io (external site)
- Material Design Guidelines (external site)
We officially support the last two versions of every major browser. Specifically, we test on the following browsers:
- Chrome
- Safari
- Firefox
- IE 11/Edge
- Opera
- Mobile Safari
- Chrome on Android