Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
92 lines (58 loc) · 3.34 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

92 lines (58 loc) · 3.34 KB

Fluent UI Web Components

License: MIT npm version

Microsoft's Fluent UI Web Components is designed to help you build web apps using Web Components styled with the Fluent design language.

Installation

Install

Fluent UI should be installed as a dependency of your app.

Yarn

yarn add @fluentui/web-components@beta

NPM

npm i @fluentui/web-components@beta

pnpm

pnpm add @fluentui/web-components@beta

From CDN

A pre-bundled script that contains all APIs needed to use FAST Foundation is available on CDN. You can use this script by adding type="module" to the script element and then importing from the CDN.

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
  <head>
    <script type="module" src="https://unpkg.com/@fluentui/web-components@beta"></script>
  </head>
  <!-- ... -->
</html>

The above CDN location points to the latest Beta release of @fluentui/web-components. It is advised that when you deploy your site or app, you import the specific version you have developed and tested with.

For simplicity, examples throughout the documentation will assume the library has been installed from NPM, but you can always replace the import location with the CDN URL.

Setup

Fluent UI Web Components are styled using tokens in the form of CSS variables. You can use the setTheme utility to provide a theme for your website or application.

import { setTheme } from '@fluentui/web-components';
import { webLightTheme } from '@fluentui/tokens';

setTheme(webLightTheme);

Usage

That's it. You can now use Fluent UI Web Components in your app.

Importing the defined component:

import '@fluentui/web-components/button.js';

Defining the element yourself using named imports:

import { ButtonDefinition, FluentDesignSystem } from '@fluentui/web-components';

ButtonDefinition.define(FluentDesignSystem.registry);

Development

To start the component development environment, run yarn start.

Known issue with Storybook site hot-reloading during development

Storybook will watch modules for changes and hot-reload the module when necessary. This is usually great but poses a problem when the module being hot-reloaded defines a custom element. A custom element name can only be defined by the CustomElementsRegistry once, so reloading a module that defines a custom element will attempt to re-register the custom element name, throwing an error because the name has already been defined. This error will manifest with the following message: Failed to execute 'define' on 'CustomElementRegistry': the name "my-custom-element-name" has already been used with this registry

This is a known issue and will indicate that you need to refresh the page. We're working on surfacing a more instructive error message for this case.

Testing

When testing locally, start the dev server and in a separate terminal window, run yarn test:dev within the web-components folder.