Calcite Components
Calcite Components, part of Esri's Calcite Design System, is a rich library of flexible, framework-agnostic web components for building applications. View the documentation for component descriptions, examples, and API reference, which includes properties, slots, styles, and theming.
Use the CDN
The most common approach for loading Calcite Components is to use the version hosted on the CDN. The components can be loaded via <script>
and <link>
tags in the head of your HTML document:
<script
type="module"
src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@esri/calcite-components@2.13.2/dist/calcite/calcite.esm.js"
></script>
<link
rel="stylesheet"
type="text/css"
href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@esri/calcite-components@2.13.2/dist/calcite/calcite.css"
/>
Once these tags are added, components can be used like any other HTML element. Only components that are used in the application will be loaded.
Use the NPM package
Calcite Components is also provided as an NPM package. To get started, first install the package, then follow the steps below. Alternatively, you can find examples using different frameworks and build tools here.
npm install @esri/calcite-components
1. Build
Choose one of the two builds provided by Calcite Components.
Custom Elements
Custom Elements is the recommended build when leveraging a frontend framework. To use this build, you will need to set the path to Calcite Components' assets. You can either use local assets, which will be explained in a subsequent step, or assets hosted on the CDN.
import { setAssetPath } from "@esri/calcite-components/dist/components";
setAssetPath("https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@esri/calcite-components/dist/calcite/assets");
Next, you need to import each component you use from the custom elements build. This will automatically define the custom elements on the window.
import "@esri/calcite-components/dist/components/calcite-button";
import "@esri/calcite-components/dist/components/calcite-icon";
import "@esri/calcite-components/dist/components/calcite-slider";
Distribution
When using the Distribution build, you'll need to define the custom elements on the window. You can also choose between local and CDN hosted assets.
import { defineCustomElements } from "@esri/calcite-components/dist/loader";
defineCustomElements(window, {
resourcesUrl: "https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@esri/calcite-components/dist/calcite/assets",
});
Since you defined the custom elements on the window, you do not need to import individual components.
2. Assets
Some components, such as calcite-icon
and calcite-date-picker
, rely on assets being available at a particular path. As mentioned, with the NPM package you have the option to provide a local path or the URL to the assets hosted on the CDN. Using the CDN hosted assets can help decrease on disk build size.
To use the assets locally, they need to be copied using a build tool or NPM script. The directory for the local assets must be named assets
, which eases the copying process. For example, /public/calcite/assets
will work, however /public/calcite-assets
will not.
The Calcite Components examples repo demonstrates using local assets in a variety of JavaScript frameworks and build tools. Each example has a README with a framework or build tool specific explanation.
cp -r node_modules/@esri/calcite-components/dist/calcite/assets/* ./public/assets/
3. Styles
Finally, load the Cascading Style Sheet (CSS). This is also dependent on your framework or build tool, however in many cases it can be imported in JavaScript:
import "@esri/calcite-components/dist/calcite/calcite.css";
TypeScript
Stencil provides a full set of typings for all the components in this repo. To make TypeScript aware of these components, just import the library:
import "@esri/calcite-components";
This will provide autocomplete of component names/properties, as well as additional HTML element types:
const loader = document.createElement("calcite-loader");
document.body.appendChild(loader);
loader.active = true;
const loader = document.querySelector(".my-loader-element") as HTMLCalciteLoaderElement;
loader.active = true;
@stencil/core
Version
When using Stencil, make sure the @stencil/core
version in your project matches the one used by Calcite Components. You may run into type errors if the @stencil/core
versions are different. You can install the same Stencil version used by @esri/calcite-components
:
npm install @stencil/core@$(npm view @esri/calcite-components dependencies["@stencil/core"])
Browser Support
Chrome | Firefox | Safari | Edge |
---|
Last 2 versions ✔ |
Contributing
We welcome contributions to this project. See CONTRIBUTING.md for an overview of contribution guidelines.
License
COPYRIGHT © 2024 Esri
All rights reserved under the copyright laws of the United States and applicable international laws, treaties, and conventions.
This material is licensed for use under the Esri Master License Agreement (MLA), and is bound by the terms of that agreement. You may redistribute and use this code without modification, provided you adhere to the terms of the MLA and include this copyright notice.
See use restrictions at http://www.esri.com/legal/pdfs/mla_e204_e300/english
For additional information, contact: Environmental Systems Research Institute, Inc. Attn: Contracts and Legal Services Department 380 New York Street Redlands, California, USA 92373 USA
email: contracts@esri.com