mwc-ripple
A Material Components icon implementation using Web Components
Getting started
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The easiest way to try out mwc-ripple is to use one of these online tools:
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You can also copy this HTML file into a local file and run it in any browser that supports JavaScript Modules.
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When you're ready to use mwc-ripple in a project, install it via npm. To run the project in the browser, a module-compatible toolctain is required. We recommend installing the Polymer CLI and using its development server as follows.
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Ensure the webcomponents polyfills are included in your HTML page
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Install webcomponents polyfills
npm i @webcomponents/webcomponentsjs
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Add webcomponents polyfills to your HTML page
<script src="@webcomponents/webcomponentsjs/webcomponents-loader.js"></script>
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Add mwc-ripple to your project:
npm i @material/mwc-ripple
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Import the mwc-ripple definition into your HTML page:
<script type="module" src="@material/mwc-ripple/index.js"></script>
Or into your module script:
import {Ripple} from "@material/mwc-ripple"
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Create an instance of mwc-ripple in your HTML page, or via any framework that supports rendering Custom Elements:
<mwc-ripple></mwc-ripple>
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Install the Polymer CLI:
npm i -g polymer-cli
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Run the development server and open a browser pointing to its URL:
polymer serve
mwc-ripple is 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 mwc-ripple uses 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 mwc-ripple.
Supported Browsers
The last 2 versions of all modern browsers are supported, including
Chrome, Safari, Opera, Firefox, Edge. In addition, Internet Explorer 11 is also supported.