npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

@samuelberthe/angular2-materialize

v1.0.0-rc.2.2

Published

Angular 2 support for Materialize CSS framework

Downloads

4

Readme

Angular2 Materialize

This repo is a fork from InfomediaLtd/angular2-materialize that is not maintained on a regular basis.

Fully compatible with Angular 6 and MaterializeCss 1.0.0-rc.2

travis build version downloads MIT Licence semantic-release Commitizen friendly PRs Welcome

NPM NPM

Angular 2 support for Materialize CSS framework http://materializecss.com/

This library adds support for the Materialize CSS framework in Angular 2. It is needed to add the dynamic behavior of Materialize CSS that is using JavaScript rather than plain CSS.

View demo here: https://samber.github.io/angular2-materialize/

To use the library you need to import it once per project and then use its MaterializeDirective directive for binding it to any component that needs a dynamic behavior, like collapsible panels, tooltips, etc.

Using @samuelberthe/angular2-materialize

Start by following the Angular CLI or webpack instructions below to add the required dependencies to your project.

Add the MaterializeModule to your NgModule:

import { MaterializeModule } from "@samuelberthe/angular2-materialize";

@NgModule({
  imports: [
    //...
    MaterializeModule,
  ],
  //...
})

In your component, use it for dynamic behavior. For example, for collapsible panels:

@Component({
    selector: "my-component",
    template: `
        <ul materialize="Collapsible" class="collapsible" data-collapsible="accordion">
          <li>
            <div class="collapsible-header"><i class="material-icons">filter_drama</i>First</div>
            <div class="collapsible-body"><p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.</p></div>
          </li>
          <li>
            <div class="collapsible-header"><i class="material-icons">place</i>Second</div>
            <div class="collapsible-body"><p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.</p></div>
          </li>
          <li>
            <div class="collapsible-header"><i class="material-icons">whatshot</i>Third</div>
            <div class="collapsible-body"><p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.</p></div>
          </li>
        </ul>

Apply an empty MaterializeDirective attribute directive for top level components, like forms:

<form materialize class="col s12">
  <div class="row">
    <div class="input-field col s6">
      <input placeholder="Placeholder" id="first_name" type="text" class="validate">
      <label for="first_name">First Name</label>
    </div>
  </div>
</form>

The MaterializeDirective attribute directive (materialize) accepts any MaterializeCSS initialization call to apply to the element. The list of supported functions are provided by MaterializeCSS. Examples: Collapsible, Chips, Modal, Tooltip, Dropdown, Tabs, FormSelect, Sidenav, FloatingActionButton, TapTarget, Carousel, Parallax, CharacterCounter, Autocomplete, Materialbox, ScrollSpy, etc.

For example, to apply tooltip:

<a materialize="Tooltip" class="btn tooltipped" data-position="bottom" data-delay="50" data-tooltip="I am tooltip">Hover me!</a>

The Materialize attribute directive also allows specifying parameters to be passed to the function, but providing a materializeParams attribute returning an array of params. Use it with a function call or even by inlining the params in the HTML.

Another useful option is emitting actions on an element. You may want to do that for calling Materialize component methods, like closing a modal dialog or triggering a toast. You can do that by setting the materializeActions attribute, which accepts an EventEmitter. The emitted events can either be a "string" type action (Materialize method call) or a structure with action and parameters:

The example below shows how you'd create a modal dialog and use the actions to open or close it.

<!-- Modal Trigger -->
<a class="waves-effect waves-light btn modal-trigger" (click)="openModal()">Modal</a>

<!-- Modal Structure -->
<div id="modal1" class="modal bottom-sheet" materialize="Modal" [materializeParams]="[{dismissible: false}]" [materializeActions]="modalActions">
  <div class="modal-content">
    <h4>Modal Header</h4>
    <p>A bunch of text</p>
  </div>
  <div class="modal-footer">
    <a class="waves-effect waves-green btn-flat" (click)="closeModal()">Close</a>
    <a class="modal-action modal-close waves-effect waves-green btn-flat">Agree</a>
  </div>
</div>
  import {MaterializeAction} from '@samuelberthe/angular2-materialize';
  //...
  modalActions = new EventEmitter<string|MaterializeAction>();
  openModal() {
    this.modalActions.emit({action:"open",params:[]});
  }
  closeModal() {
    this.modalActions.emit({action:"close",params:[]});
  }

For dynamic select elements apply the materializeSelectOptions directive to trigger element updates when the options list changes:

<select materialize="FormSelect" [materializeSelectOptions]="selectOptions">
  <option *ngFor="let option of selectOptions" [value]="option.value">{{option.name}}</option>
</select>

Upgrading from [email protected]

New api for materializeActions EventEmitter ("methods" in the new MaterializeCSS vocabulary). Example with modals:

<div materialize="modal" [materializeParams]="[{dismissible: true, opacity: 0.7}]" [materializeActions]="this.modal">
    ...
</div>
this.modal.emit({ action: "open", params: [] });

instead of

this.modal.emit({ action: "modal", params: ['open'] });

Also a lot of breaking changes in component HTML and CSS (and sometimes js attributes). Please refer to official MaterializeCSS doc.

Installing & configuring @samuelberthe/angular2-materialize in projects created with the Angular CLI

Install MaterializeCSS and @samuelberthe/angular2-materialize from npm

npm install materialize-css --save
npm install @samuelberthe/angular2-materialize --save

jQuery 2.2 and Hammer.JS are required

npm install jquery@^2.2.4 --save
npm install hammerjs --save

Edit the angular-cli.json :

  • Go to section apps and find styles array inside it (with only styles.css value by default), add the following line inside array before any styles:
  "../node_modules/materialize-css/dist/css/materialize.css"
  • Go to section apps and find scripts array inside it, and add the following lines inside array
  "../node_modules/jquery/dist/jquery.js",
  "../node_modules/hammerjs/hammer.js",
  "../node_modules/materialize-css/dist/js/materialize.js"

Add to the top of app.module.ts

import { MaterializeModule } from '@samuelberthe/angular2-materialize';

Add MaterializeModule inside imports array of @NgModule decorator in app.module.ts

Add this line to header of index.html

<link href="http://fonts.googleapis.com/icon?family=Material+Icons" rel="stylesheet">

Installing and configuring @samuelberthe/angular2-materialize with webpack

Install MaterializeCSS and @samuelberthe/angular2-materialize from npm

npm install materialize-css --save
npm install @samuelberthe/angular2-materialize --save

MaterializeCSS required jQuery and HammerJS. Check the exact version materialize-css is compatible with:

npm install jquery@^2.2.4 --save
npm install hammerjs --save

Add the Google MD fonts to your index.html:

<link href="http://fonts.googleapis.com/icon?family=Material+Icons" rel="stylesheet">

Import materialize-css styles:

<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/materialize/0.98.2/css/materialize.min.css">

Add the following plugin to your webpack configuration to provide jQuery:

const ProvidePlugin = require('webpack/lib/ProvidePlugin');
module.exports = {
  //...
  plugins: [
      new ProvidePlugin({
          "window.jQuery": "jquery",
          Hammer: "hammerjs/hammer"
      })
  ]
  //...
};

Import MaterializeCSS programatically, in the same place where you import @samuelberthe/angular2-materialize module (usually in your main module, or shared module):

import 'materialize-css';
import { MaterializeModule } from '@samuelberthe/angular2-materialize';

Loading additional resources

Another thing you would need to confirm is being able to load web fonts properly:

{ test: /.(png|woff(2)?|eot|ttf|svg)(\?[a-z0-9=\.]+)?$/, loader: 'url-loader?limit=100000' },

Notice that the url-loader is required for this to work (npm install it).

The following example project is a fork of the angular2-webpack-starter with the addition of @samuelberthe/angular2-materialize: InfomediaLtd/angular2-webpack-starter