Grab the latest polymer-redux and give it a go! Click here: https://goo.gl/fGUSf4 How do you manage state in a large Polymer app? This is probably the most f...
I've created a Polymer element for rendering markdown which uses the marked.js library. I was wondering, what is the recommended way of loading in its dependencies?
HTML imports are cool. If you haven’t heard of them before, you should read Eric Bidelman’s excellent introduction to them, but they’re pretty self explanato...
Web Components are an amazing way to componentized web applications in small, reusable pieces. Coding with Polymer, even reusability stops feeling like an afterthought but something one naturally…
Recently, I had a chance to apply React.js and Polymer in real-world applications.While both React and Polymer share the same idea of components, they use ra...
Most developers and users won’t argue building on and maximizing the experiential capabilities of the modern web has been a slow process. When scoping a development project, clients have historically…
Polymer lets you build encapsulated, reusable Web Components that work just like standard HTML elements, to use in building web applications. Using a Web Component built with Polymer is as simple as importing its definition then using it like any other HTML element.
I work on a library called Polymer, which helps you write web components faster and easier. This is awesome, but it’s only awesome if you (yes, YOU) know what a web component is, and know that you want to write one. So here’s a story about what these things are and teaches you how to use them without showing you 10 pages of docs and getting you to install tools and CLIs. Maybe it’s for you. Maybe it isn’t. In either case, it has otters.