A starting point for building web applications with Polymer 1.0
- Polymer, Paper, Iron and Neon elements
- Material Design layout
- Routing with Page.js
- Unit testing with Web Component Tester
- Optional offline setup through Platinum Service Worker elements
- End-to-end Build Tooling (including Vulcanize)
To take advantage of Polymer Starter Kit you need to:
- Get a copy of the code.
- Install the dependencies if you don't already have them.
- Modify the application to your liking.
- Deploy your production code.
Download and extract Polymer Starter Kit to where you want to work. The project comes in two flavours - Light and Full.
Beginners: Try Polymer Starter Kit Light. This doesn't require any extra dependencies nor knowledge of modern front-end tooling. This option is good for prototyping if you haven't build a Polymer app before.
Intermediate - Advanced: Use the full version of Polymer Starter Kit. This comes with all the build tools you'll need for testing and productionising your app so it's nice and lean. You'll need to run a few extra commands to install the tools we recommend but it's worth it to make sure your final app is super optimised.
Rob Dodson has a fantastic PolyCast video available that walks through using Polymer Starter Kit. An end-to-end with Polymer and Polymer Starter Kit talk is also available.
With Node.js installed, run the following one liner from the root of your Polymer Starter Kit download:
npm install -g gulp bower && npm install && bower install
The full starter kit requires the following major dependencies:
- Node.js, used to run JavaScript tools from the command line.
- npm, the node package manager, installed with Node.js and used to install Node.js packages.
- gulp, a Node.js-based build tool.
- bower, a Node.js-based package manager used to install front-end packages (like Polymer).
To install dependencies:
- Check your Node.js version.
node --version
The version should be at or above 0.12.x.
-
If you don't have Node.js installed, or you have a lower version, go to nodejs.org and click on the big green Install button.
-
Install
gulp
andbower
globally.
npm install -g gulp bower
This lets you run gulp
and bower
from the command line.
- Install the starter kit's local
npm
andbower
dependencies.
cd polymer-starter-kit && npm install && bower install
This installs the element sets (Paper, Iron, Platinum) and tools the starter kit requires to build and serve apps.
gulp serve
This outputs an IP address you can use to locally test and another that can be used on devices connected to your network.
gulp test:local
This runs the unit tests defined in the app/test
directory through web-component-tester.
To run tests Java 7 or higher is required. To update Java go to http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/index.html and download JDK and install it.
gulp
Build and optimize the current project, ready for deployment. This includes linting as well as vulcanization, image, script, stylesheet and HTML optimization and minification.
Polymer 1.0 introduces a shim for CSS custom properties. We take advantage of this in app/styles/app-theme.html
to provide theming for your application. You can also find our presets for Material Design breakpoints in this file.
Read more about CSS custom properties.
- main.css - to define styles that can be applied outside of Polymer's custom CSS properties implementation. Some of the use-cases include defining styles that you want to be applied for a splash screen, styles for your application 'shell' before it gets upgraded using Polymer or critical style blocks that you want parsed before your elements are.
- app-theme.html - to provide theming for your application. You can also find our presets for Material Design breakpoints in this file.
- shared-styles.html - to share styles between elements and index.html.
- element styles only - styles specific to element. These styles should be inside the
<style></style>
insidetemplate
.
<dom-module id="my-list">
<template>
<style>
:host {
display: block;
background-color: yellow;
}
</style>
<ul>
<template is="dom-repeat" items="{{items}}">
<li><span class="paper-font-body1">{{item}}</span></li>
</template>
</ul>
</template>
</dom-module>
These style files are located in the styles folder.
Web apps built with Polymer Starter Kit come configured with support for Web Component Tester - Polymer's preferred tool for authoring and running unit tests. This makes testing your element based applications a pleasant experience.
Read more about using Web Component tester.
Polymer uses Bower for package management. This makes it easy to keep your elements up to date and versioned. For tooling, we use npm to manage Node.js-based dependencies.
Polymer Starter Kit offers an optional offline experience thanks to Service Worker and the Platinum Service Worker elements. New to Service Worker? Read the following introduction to understand how it works.
Our optional offline setup should work well for relatively simple applications. For more complex apps, we recommend learning how Service Worker works so that you can make the most of the Platinum Service Worker element abstractions.
To enable Service Worker support for Polymer Starter Kit project use these 3 steps:
- Uncomment Service Worker code in index.html
<!-- Uncomment next block to enable Service Worker support (1/2) -->
<!--
<paper-toast id="caching-complete"
duration="6000"
text="Caching complete! This app will work offline.">
</paper-toast>
<platinum-sw-register auto-register
clients-claim
skip-waiting
on-service-worker-installed="displayInstalledToast">
<platinum-sw-cache default-cache-strategy="networkFirst"
cache-config-file="precache.json">
</platinum-sw-cache>
</platinum-sw-register>
-->
- Uncomment Service Worker code in elements.html
<!-- Uncomment next block to enable Service Worker Support (2/2) -->
<!--
<link rel="import" href="../bower_components/platinum-sw/platinum-sw-cache.html">
<link rel="import" href="../bower_components/platinum-sw/platinum-sw-register.html">
-->
- Uncomment 'cache-config' in the
runSequence()
section of the 'default' gulp task, like below: (gulpfile.js)
// Build Production Files, the Default Task
gulp.task('default', ['clean'], function (cb) {
runSequence(
['copy', 'styles'],
'elements',
['jshint', 'images', 'fonts', 'html'],
'vulcanize', 'cache-config',
cb);
});
If you experience an issue with Service Worker support in your application, check the origin of the issue and use the appropriate issue tracker:
- sw-toolbox
- platinum-sw
- platinum-push-notifications-manager
- For all other issues, feel free to file them here.
Service Workers are only available to "secure origins" (HTTPS sites, basically) in line with a policy to prefer secure origins for powerful new features. However http://localhost is also considered a secure origin, so if you can, developing on localhost is an easy way to avoid this error. For production, your site will need to support HTTPS.
If you need to debug the event listener wire-up use chrome://serviceworker-internals
.
This page shows your registered workers and provides some basic operations.
- Unregister: Unregisters the worker.
- Start: Starts the worker. This would happen automatically when you navigate to a page in the worker's scope.
- Stop: Stops the worker.
- Sync: Dispatches a 'sync' event to the worker. If you don't handle this event, nothing will happen.
- Push: Dispatches a 'push' event to the worker. If you don't handle this event, nothing will happen.
- Inspect: Opens the worker in the Inspector.
In order to guarantee that the latest version of your Service Worker script is being used, follow these instructions:
- After you made changes to your service worker script, close all but one of the tabs pointing to your web application
- Hit shift-reload to bypass the service worker as to ensure that the remaining tab isn't under the control of a service worker
- Hit reload to let the newer version of the Service Worker control the page.
If you find anything to still be stale, you can also try navigating to chrome:serviceworker-internals
(in Chrome), finding the relevant Service Worker entry for your application and clicking 'Unregister' before refreshing your app. This will (of course) only clear it from the local development machine. If you have already deployed to production then further work will be necessary to remove it from your user's machines.
If for any reason you need to disable Service Worker support after previously enabling it, you can remove it from your Polymer Starter Kit project using these 4 steps:
- Remove references to the platinum-sw elements from your application index.
- Remove the two Platinum Service Worker elements (platinum-sw/..) in app/elements/elements.html
- Remove 'precache' from the list in the 'default' gulp task (gulpfile.js)
- Navigate to
chrome://serviceworker-internals
and unregister any Service Workers registered by Polymer Starter Kit for your app just in case there's a copy of it cached.
generator-polymer now includes support for Polymer Starter Kit out of the box.
Theming can be achieved using CSS Custom properties via app/styles/app-theme.html.
You can also use app/styles/main.css
for pure CSS stylesheets (e.g for global styles), however note that Custom properties will not work there under the shim.
A Polycast is also available that walks through theming using Polymer 1.0.
This can be done via app/elements/routing.html
. We use Page.js for routing and new routes
can be defined in this import. We then toggle which <iron-pages>
page to display based on the selected route.
<more-routing>
(in our opinion) is good, but lacks imperative hooks for getting full control
over the routing in your application. This is one place where a pure JS router shines. We may
at some point switch back to a declarative router when our hook requirements are tackled. That
said, it should be trivial to switch to <more-routing>
or another declarative router in your
own local setup.
App layouts live in a separate repository called app-layout-templates. You can select a template and copy over the relevant parts you would like to reuse to Polymer Starter Kit.
You will probably need to change paths to where your Iron and Paper dependencies can be found to get everything working.
This can be done by adding them to the elements.html
import.
Our most commonly reported issue is around system permissions for installing Node.js dependencies.
We recommend following the fixing npm permissions
guide to address any messages around administrator permissions being required. If you use sudo
to work around these issues, this guide may also be useful for avoiding that.
If you run into an exception that mentions five optional dependencies failing (or an EEXIST
error), you
may have run into an npm bug. We recommend updating to npm 2.11.0+
to work around this. You can do this by opening a Command Prompt/terminal and running npm install npm@2.11.0 -g
. If you are on Windows,
Node.js (and npm) may have been installed into C:\Program Files\
. Updating npm by running npm install npm@2.11.0 -g
will install npm
into %AppData%\npm
, but your system will still use the npm version. You can avoid this by deleting your older npm from C:\Program Files\nodejs
as described here.
If the issue is to do with a failure somewhere else, you might find that due to a network issue
a dependency failed to correctly install. We recommend running npm cache clean
and deleting the node_modules
directory followed by
npm install
to see if this corrects the problem. If not, please check the issue tracker in case
there is a workaround or fix already posted.
Some Windows users have run into trouble with the elements.vulcanized.html
file in their dist
folder
not being correctly vulcanized. This can happen if your project is in a folder with a name containing a
space. You can work around this issue by ensuring your path doesn't contain one.
There is also an in-flight issue
where some are finding they need to disable the inlineCss
option in our configuration for Vulcanize
to correctly build. We are still investigating this, however for the time-being use the workaround if
you find your builds getting stuck here.
At the bottom of app/index.html
, you will find a build block that can be used to include additional
scripts for your app. Build blocks are just normal script tags that are wrapped in a HTML
comment that indicates where to concatenate and minify their final contents to.
Below, we've added in script2.js
and script3.js
to this block. The line
<!-- build:js scripts/app.js -->
specifies that these scripts will be squashed into scripts/app.js
during a build.
<!-- build:js scripts/app.js -->
<script src="scripts/app.js"></script>
<script src="scripts/script2.js"></script>
<script src="scripts/script3.js"></script>
<!-- endbuild-->
If you are not using the build-blocks, but still wish for additional files (e.g scripts or stylesheets) to be included in the final dist
directory, you will need to either copy these files as part of the gulpfile.js build process (see the copy
task for how to automate this) or manually copy the files.
Don't worry! We've got your covered. Polymer Starter Kit tries to offer everything you need to build and optimize your apps for production, which is why we include the tooling we do. We realise however that our tooling setup may not be for everyone.
If you find that you just want the simplest setup possible, we recommend using Polymer Starter Kit light, which is available from the Releases page. This takes next to no time to setup.
Polymer Starter Kit is a new project and is an ongoing effort by the Web Component community. We welcome your bug reports, PRs for improvements, docs and anything you think would improve the experience for other Polymer developers.