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Just my two-cents worth, as a highly interested (non-professional) observer of the Web Component pre-revolution:
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Hi Eric:
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Yeah that makes total sense. To be honest, I often get tripped up knowing what's in and what's out since things move so fast and there are varying levels of support. webcomponents.org sounds like a good place to house such a thing. anyone disagree?
On Tue, Mar 11, 2014 at 10:35 PM, Jonathan Dodd <nw.e...@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Rob:Yes, that has the right feel. With this kind of information, it would be possible to provide consistent fall-back functionality and rendering within web-components themselves. Or, for example, a "modernizr-like" addition within the Platform.js polyfill, itself, could dynamically provide this implementation information (for the current browser) so that any web-component could access/react to whatever browser it found itself in. Or, a VERY plain vanilla Web Component (or js "shim"), with no visible rendering, and utilizing only (name-spaced) JavaScript could provide this information via JS globals. With this information constantly changing (as must be expected for years to come) but not being succinctly and accurately available, how can Web Components be utilized on "live" web sites??
--Custom Web Components, in my opinion, should be usable (via fall-backs with known characteristics) in virtually any browser (with at least JS and basic HTML/CSS), just like "regular" HTML elements.Does this make any sense.... coming from the viewpoint of a beginner?Thanks, Jonathan--To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/webcomponents/423c3e94-41c6-4ca9-8e31-17893f24f685%40googlegroups.com.
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Rob and Eric:
Rob and Eric:Wow! Thank you both for taking the time to respond to my "shoot-from-the-hip, perhaps-not-fully-baked" comments. It was not my intent to hijack this thread and take it so far from the original question posed: Would "high-quality examples of custom elements that don't necessarily use Polymer or Brick" be useful? Again, I would personally be grateful for such a resource.Eric:> You can effectively forget about things like document.register and ^ && ^^. (and) An implicit goal of the polyfills is that you should not have to feature detectIdeally, I agree. However, I might point out that ^ and ^^ remain in stable chrome, have been replaced in Canary, and from the resources you mention ( http://jonrimmer.github.io/are-we-componentized-yet/
and http://www.polymer-project.org/resources/compatibility.html) it is not obvious what the state of the polyfill is -- for this or any other feature.
>... it's been a daunting task to constantly update Polymer documentation, html5rocks articles, presentations. And that's my full time job :)Believe me, we lurkers/followers appreciate all your efforts!
> Drop in platform.js and you get a browser from 2015This is precisely where my whole ramble started. Basically, the entire web browser universe -- including Chrome and Canary, unless users have set the correct flags -- falls into this case. So, it is important to assess it dispassionately. If a suite of "plain vanilla" web components (which fully utilize the important underlying APIs) existed, could they be dropped into modern versions of IE, Safari, Chrome, FireFox and so forth -- with platform.js -- and 1) behave consistently or 2) fall back gracefully? From my own experimentation, I would say the polyfill is not yet up to this level of reliability/usefulness. When it is
> Literally, the ink is still wet! Documentation on MDN and webplatform.org is only a matter of time, but it will eventually happen.I look forward to it!Thanks, againJonathan
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