Usage
Shoelace components are just regular HTML elements, or custom elements to be precise. You can use them like any other element. Each component has detailed documentation that describes its full API, including properties, events, methods, and more.
If you’re new to custom elements, often referred to as “web components,” this section will familiarize you with how to use them.
Attributes & Properties
Many components have properties that can be set using attributes. For example, buttons accept a
size
attribute that maps to the size
property which dictates the button’s size.
<sl-button size="small">Click me</sl-button>
Some properties are boolean, so they only have true/false values. To activate a boolean property, add the corresponding attribute without a value.
<sl-button disabled>Click me</sl-button>
In rare cases, a property may require an array, an object, or a function. For example, to customize the
color picker’s list of preset swatches, you set the swatches
property to an array of colors.
This must be done with JavaScript.
<sl-color-picker></sl-color-picker> <script> const colorPicker = document.querySelector('sl-color-picker'); colorPicker.swatches = ['red', 'orange', 'yellow', 'green', 'blue', 'purple']; </script>
Refer to a component’s documentation for a complete list of its properties.
Events
You can listen for standard events such as click
, mouseover
, etc. as you normally
would. However, it’s important to note that many events emitted within a component’s shadow root will be
retargeted
to the host element. This may result in, for example, multiple click
handlers executing even if
the user clicks just once. Furthermore, event.target
will point to the host element, making
things even more confusing.
As a result, you should almost always listen for custom events instead. For example, instead of listening to
click
to determine when an <sl-checkbox>
gets toggled, listen to
sl-change
.
<sl-checkbox>Check me</sl-checkbox> <script> const checkbox = document.querySelector('sl-checkbox'); checkbox.addEventListener('sl-change', event => { console.log(event.target.checked ? 'checked' : 'not checked'); }); </script>
All custom events are prefixed with sl-
to prevent collisions with standard events and other
libraries. Refer to a component’s documentation for a complete list of its custom events.
Methods
Some components have methods you can call to trigger various behaviors. For example, you can set focus on a
Shoelace input using the focus()
method.
<sl-input></sl-input> <script> const input = document.querySelector('sl-input'); input.focus(); </script>
Refer to a component’s documentation for a complete list of its methods and their arguments.
Slots
Many components use slots to accept content inside of them. The most common slot is the
default slot, which includes any content inside the component that doesn’t have a
slot
attribute.
For example, a button’s default slot is used to populate its label.
<sl-button>Click me</sl-button>
Some components also have named slots. A named slot can be populated by adding a child element with
the appropriate slot
attribute. Notice how the icon below has the
slot="prefix"
attribute? This tells the component to place the icon into its
prefix
slot.
<sl-button> <sl-icon slot="prefix" name="gear"></sl-icon> Settings </sl-button>
The location of a named slot doesn’t matter. You can put it anywhere inside the component and the browser will move it to the right place automatically!
Refer to a component’s documentation for a complete list of available slots.
Don’t Use Self-closing Tags
Custom elements cannot have self-closing tags. Similar to <script>
and
<textarea>
, you must always include the full closing tag.
<!-- Don't do this --> <sl-input /> <!-- Always do this --> <sl-input></sl-input>
Differences from Native Elements
You might expect similarly named elements to share the same API as native HTML elements, but this is not always the case. Shoelace components are not designed to be one-to-one replacements for their HTML counterparts. While they usually share the same API, there may be subtle differences.
For example, <button>
and <sl-button>
both have a
type
attribute, but the native one defaults to submit
while the Shoelace one
defaults to button
since this is a better default for most users.
Don’t make assumptions about a component’s API! To prevent unexpected behaviors, please take the time to review the documentation and make sure you understand what each attribute, property, method, and event is intended to do.
Waiting for Components to Load
Web components are registered with JavaScript, so depending on how and when you load Shoelace, you may notice a Flash of Undefined Custom Elements (FOUCE) when the page loads. There are a couple ways to prevent this, both of which are described in the linked article.
One option is to use the
:defined
CSS pseudo-class to “hide” custom elements that haven’t been registered yet. You can scope it to specific
tags or you can hide all undefined custom elements as shown below.
:not(:defined) { visibility: hidden; }
As soon as a custom element is registered, it will immediately appear with all of its styles, effectively
eliminating FOUCE. Note the use of visibility: hidden
instead of display: none
to
reduce shifting as elements are registered. The drawback to this approach is that custom elements can
potentially appear one by one instead of all at the same time.
Another option is to use
customElements.whenDefined()
, which returns a promise that resolves when the specified element gets registered. You’ll probably want to
use it with
Promise.allSettled()
in case an element fails to load for some reason.
A clever way to use this method is to hide the <body>
with opacity: 0
and
add a class that fades it in as soon as all your custom elements are defined.
<style> body { opacity: 0; } body.ready { opacity: 1; transition: 0.25s opacity; } </style> <script type="module"> await Promise.allSettled([ customElements.whenDefined('sl-button'), customElements.whenDefined('sl-card'), customElements.whenDefined('sl-rating') ]); // Button, card, and rating are registered now! Add // the `ready` class so the UI fades in. document.body.classList.add('ready'); </script>
Component Rendering and Updating
Shoelace components are built with Lit, a tiny library that makes authoring custom elements easier, more maintainable, and a lot of fun! As a Shoelace user, here is some helpful information about rendering and updating you should probably be aware of.
To optimize performance and reduce re-renders, Lit batches component updates. This means changing multiple attributes or properties at the same time will result in just a single re-render. In most cases, this isn’t an issue, but there may be times you’ll need to wait for the component to update before continuing.
Consider this example. We’re going to change the checked
property of the checkbox and observe
its corresponding checked
attribute, which happens to reflect.
const checkbox = document.querySelector('sl-checkbox'); checkbox.checked = true; console.log(checkbox.hasAttribute('checked')); // false
Most developers will expect this to be true
instead of false
, but the component
hasn’t had a chance to re-render yet so the attribute doesn’t exist when hasAttribute()
is
called. Since changes are batched, we need to wait for the update before proceeding. This can be done using
the updateComplete
property, which is available on all Lit-based components.
const checkbox = document.querySelector('sl-checkbox'); checkbox.checked = true; checkbox.updateComplete.then(() => { console.log(checkbox.hasAttribute('checked')); // true });
This time we see an empty string, which means the boolean attribute is now present!
Avoid using setTimeout()
or requestAnimationFrame()
in situations like this.
They might work, but it’s far more reliable to use updateComplete
instead.
Code Completion
VS Code
Shoelace ships with a file called vscode.html-custom-data.json
that can be used to describe
it’s custom elements to Visual Studio Code. This enables code completion for Shoelace components (also known
as “code hinting” or “IntelliSense”). To enable it, you need to tell VS Code where the file is.
- Install Shoelace locally
-
If it doesn’t already exist, create a folder called
.vscode
at the root of your project - If it doesn’t already exist, create a file inside that folder called
settings.json
- Add the following to the file
{ "html.customData": ["./node_modules/@shoelace-style/shoelace/dist/vscode.html-custom-data.json"] }
If settings.json
already exists, simply add the above line to the root of the object. Note that
you may need to restart VS Code for the changes to take effect.
JetBrains IDEs
If you are using a
JetBrains IDE
and you are installing Shoelace from NPM, the editor will automatically detect the
web-types.json
file from the package and you should immediately see component information in
your editor.
If you are installing from the CDN, you can
download a local copy
and add it to the root of your project. Be sure to add a reference to the web-types.json
file
in your package.json
in order for your editor to properly detect it.
{ ... "web-types": "./web-types.json" ... }
If you are using types from multiple projects, you can add an array of references.
{ ... "web-types": [ ..., "./web-types.json" ] ... }
Other Editors
Most popular editors support custom code completion with a bit of configuration. Please submit a feature request for your editor of choice. PRs are also welcome!