Polaris is a React component library designed to help developers create the best experience for merchants who use Shopify. Visit the Polaris style guide to learn more.
We strongly recommend using the React versions of our components. It’s the version that we’ll be using internally. It allows for rich, complex components like Tabs and Popovers, and will not have as many breaking changes as the CSS-only version.
Run the following command using npm:
npm install @shopify/polaris --save
If you prefer Yarn, use the following command instead:
yarn add @shopify/polaris
- Include the CSS in your HTML:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://sdks.shopifycdn.com/polaris/1.10.0/polaris.min.css" />
Note: you can import the CSS directly into your project if your asset packager supports it:
import '@shopify/polaris/styles.css';
- Include any of the provided components in your project:
import {Page, Card, Button} from '@shopify/polaris';
- Tell React to render the element in the DOM:
ReactDOM.render(
<Page title="Example app">
<Card sectioned>
<Button onClick={() => alert('Button clicked!')}>Example button</Button>
</Card>
</Page>,
document.querySelector('#app')
);
We provide React wrappers around Shopify’s Embedded App SDK (EASDK). You don’t need to go through the initialization of the EASDK as described in the docs. Instead, configure the connection to the Admin through an EmbeddedApp component.
If React doesn’t make sense for your application, you can use a CSS-only version of our components. This includes all the styles you need for every component in the library, but you’ll be responsible for writing the correct markup and updating classes and DOM attributes in response to user events.
- Include the CSS in your HTML:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://sdks.shopifycdn.com/polaris/1.10.0/polaris.min.css" />
- Include the markup and associated classes in your HTML document:
<button class="Polaris-Button">Example button</button>
We have created example applications to document some of the ways you could include Polaris in one of your own applications. Each of these examples includes further documentation on how to install dependencies and run the app:
We’ve also created a simple, hot-reloading playground for these components. You can edit the playground/Playground.tsx
file to import the components you want to play with, and run yarn dev
in order to start the development server.
If you’re new to React, we recommend you start with the official React Getting Started documentation. As you read through the topics we suggest you follow along using their React Hello World CodePen example.
Additional resources:
- Online training courses at reacttraining.com, buildwithreact.com, and reactforbeginners.com.
- The community resources in Awesome React.
- As questions and find answers in the various React support communities.
We set out to make our components easy to use. Each of our components has a well-documented (and fully typed) public interface with strong, consistently-applied conventions. This way, developers don’t need to worry about the underlying implementation. Instead, they can focus on creating amazing merchant experiences.
We ensure that our components are made for everyone. They meet accessibility standards and are responsive to any screen or device. We also put a lot of effort into optimizing the performance of the components, so everyone can build inclusive experiences that work.
We make our components flexible enough to meet diverse needs. They present the information you pass in and give you smart callbacks when something has changed, but they don’t enforce any structure beyond that. No matter what type of experience you’re creating, you can use components as the building blocks of your product or feature.
- Source code is licensed under MIT
- All icons and images are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0
Create an issue or feature request.
At this point in time we’re not accepting pull requests. This is something we’ll support in the future. Stay tuned.