UI5 Web Components

UI5 Web Components - the enterprise-flavored sugar on top of native APIs! B...

README

UI5 icon

UI5 Web Components CI npm Package Version REUSE status



- A rich set of enterprise-grade reusable UI elements driven by a lightweight framework (~20K gzipped for the framework part).
- Suitable for building anything from static web sites to complex web applications.
- Usable with any current or future web development framework (React, Angular, Vue, etc.).
- Implement the SAP Fiori design and follow the SAP Fiori Design Guidelines for a consistent UX.
- Created and maintained by SAP as part of the UI5 product family.

Why use web components?


- Future-proof: being web standards, they are compatible with any version of any web development framework.
- Encapsulated: the HTML/CSS in the shadow DOM are protected from interference by the web page and vice versa, making them stable in any environment and suitable not only for apps, but also for libraries and micro-frontends.
- Elegant: being custom HTML elements, they hide implementation complexity behind a single HTML tag, making them easily usable with the standard DOM APIs.

Where can I see them in action?


More Resources

- [Customizing with UI Theme Designer](./docs/3-customizing/01-theme.md)

Related Projects


OpenUI5


1. What is UI5/OpenUI5?


OpenUI5 is an open source JS framework that lets you build enterprise-ready web applications, responsive to all devices, running on almost any browser of your choice. It's based on JavaScript, using jQuery as its foundation and follows web standards. It eases your development with a client-side HTML5 rendering library including a rich set of controls and supports data binding to different data models (JSON, XML and OData).

2. How do UI5 Web Components relate to OpenUI5?


UI5 Web Components…
…are not built on top of UI5, but rather lightweight and independent UI elements.
…are not a successor of UI5, but rather a complementary offering.
…bring the relevant UI5 qualities and SAP Fiori UX to the HTML level, usable with any web framework.

UI5 Web Components are good for…
…web applications which already use a different web framework.
static web sites built without web frameworks, to just add a few interactive UI elements.

UI5 remains what it is: the best choice for…
…building complete enterprise-ready and responsive web applications.

UI5 Web Components for React


UI5 Web Components for React is a wrapper implementation around
UI5 Web Components which makes using them in React even more comfortable. The current version of React (react 16) has some
shortcomings when it comes to handling Custom Elements, namely the binding of boolean attributes as well as adding event listeners to custom event names like selection-change. With the help of UI5 Web Components for React, you can use the UI5 Web Components in React as if they were native React components. In addition to that, this library is also offering TypeScript definitions for all components, some complex layout components built on top of UI5 Web Components as well as Charting Components.


How to Use


1. Install the NPM module(s) that ship the desired UI5 Web Component(s), for example if you need ui5-button:

  1. ```sh
  2. npm install @ui5/webcomponents
  3. ```

2. Import the desired UI5 Web Component(s) to your app:

  1. ``` js
  2. import "@ui5/webcomponents/dist/Button.js"; // loads and defines ui5-button
  3. ```

3. Use the UI5 Web Component(s) as you would use any HTML element:

  1. ``` html
  2. <ui5-button>Hello world!</ui5-button>
  3. ```


Is there a CDN I can use?


No, you are expected to import only the components (or other public APIs) that you are going to use and bundle them along with the rest
of your application.

Browser Support


UI5 Web Components are supported by all major modern browsers.

Browser | Supported versions
Chrome | Latest
Firefox | Latest
Safari | Latest
Edge | Latest

Project Structure, Development and Build


This section might be of interest to you mainly if you need to run or build the project locally

Requirements

- Node.js (version 14 or higher)

Note: The UI5 Web Components project is set up with the Yarn node package manager.
This is because it offers functionality that the otherwise preferred npm package manager is currently lacking. Namely, the workspace setting which is currently used in the UI5 Web Components (mono-)repository. Note that npm might add this feature in the future.

Structure


The UI5 Web Components project contains several packages:

ProjectNPMDescription
|-----------------------------|--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
`main`[UI5Bread-and-butter
`fiori`[UI5More
`icons`[UI5A
`icons-tnt`[UI5A
`icons-business-suite`[UI5A
`base`[UI5The
`theming`[UI5Theming
`localization`[UI5`i18n`
`create-package`[CreateAn
`playground`N/AThe

How to run the project locally:


  1. ```sh
  2. yarn # to install all dependencies
  3. yarn build # to build the project initially (this step needs to be performed only the first time you run the project)
  4. yarn start # to serve the project
  5. ```

A dev server will be started and the browser will open its index URL with a listing of all test pages.

You can start the Playground app with the following commands:

  1. ```sh
  2. # install playground specific dependencies (one time only)
  3. cd packages/playground
  4. yarn install:dependencies

  5. # start the playground from the project root
  6. cd ../..
  7. yarn start:playground

  8. # open http://localhost:4000/
  9. ```

Note: If you wish to manually install dependencies & run the Playground you can check out our in depth tutorial

Production Build

To build the UI5 Web Components project, run the following commands:

  1. ```sh
  2. yarn # to install all dependencies
  3. yarn build # to build the project
  4. ```

Afterwards, you can find the build output in the dist folder of the corresponding package folder.
For example, to find the Button component (that belongs to the main package), look inside the packages/main/dist folder.

Limitations

None as of 1.3.0

Known Issues

No major bugs known. To report an issue or view the currently open issues, click here.

Support

We welcome all comments, suggestions, questions, and bug reports. Please follow our Support Guidelines on how to report an issue, or chat with us in the#webcomponents channel of the OpenUI5 Community Slack.

Contribute

Please check our Contribution Guidelines.