AngularJS Material
Support for legacy AngularJS ended on January 1st, 2022.
See @angular/core
for the actively supported Angular.
See the following, related, actively supported Angular packages:
This repository was used to publish the AngularJS Material v1.x library and localized installs
using npm
. You can find the component source-code for this library in the
AngularJS Material repository. This package and related repositories
have reached End-of-Life.
AngularJS Material is an implementation of Google’s
Material Design Specification (2014-2017)
for AngularJS (v1.x) developers.
For an implementation of the Material Design Specification (2018+),
please see the Angular Material project which is built for
Angular (v2+) developers.
Layouts and SCSS
Included in this repository are the:
- SCSS files which are
used to build the *.css files - Layout files which
are used with the AngularJS Material (Flexbox) Layout API.
Note these are already included in the
angular-material.css
files. These copies are for direct
developer access and contain IE flexbox fixes; as needed.
Installing AngularJS Material
You can install this package locally with npm
.
Please note: AngularJS Material requires AngularJS 1.7.2 to AngularJS 1.8.x.
# To install latest formal release
npm install angular-material
# To install latest release and update package.json
npm install angular-material --save
# To install from HEAD of master
npm install http://github.com/angular/bower-material/tarball/master
# or use alternate syntax to install HEAD from master
npm install http://github.com/angular/bower-material#master --save
# note: ^^ creates the following package.json dependency
# "angular-material": "git+ssh://git@github.com/angular/bower-material.git#master"
# To install the v1.2.1 version
npm install http://github.com/angular/bower-material/tarball/v1.2.1 --save
# To view all installed package
npm list
Using the AngularJS Material Library
You have installed the AngularJS library, next include the scripts and
stylesheet in your main HTML file, in the order shown in the example below. Note that NPM
will install the files under /node_modules/angular-material/
.
Using the CDN
With the Google CDN, you will not need to download local copies of the distribution files.
Instead, reference the CDN URLs to use those remote library files.
This is especially useful when using online tools such as CodePen, Plunker, or jsFiddle.
Note that the above sample references the 1.2.1 CDN release. Your version will change
based on the latest stable release version.
Unit Testing with Angular Material
If you are using AngularJS Material and will be using Jasmine to test your custom application
code, you will need to also load two (2) AngularJS mock files:
- AngularJS mocks
- angular-mocks.js from
/node_modules/angular-mocks/angular-mocks.js
- angular-mocks.js from
- AngularJS Material mocks
- angular-material-mocks.js from
/node_modules/angular-material/angular-material-mocks.js
- angular-material-mocks.js from
Shown below is a karma-configuration file (karma.conf.js
) sample that may be a useful template for
your testing purposes:
module.exports = function(config) {
var SRC = [
'src/myApp/**/*.js',
'test/myApp/**/*.spec.js'
];
var LIBS = [
'node_modules/angular/angular.js',
'node_modules/angular-animate/angular-animate.js',
'node_modules/angular-aria/angular-aria.js',
'node_modules/angular-messages/angular-messages.js',
'node_modules/angular-material/angular-material.js',
'node_modules/angular-mocks/angular-mocks.js',
'node_modules/angular-material/angular-material-mocks.js'
];
config.set({
basePath: __dirname + '/..',
frameworks: ['jasmine'],
files: LIBS.concat(SRC),
port: 9876,
reporters: ['progress'],
colors: true,
autoWatch: false,
singleRun: true,
browsers: ['Chrome']
});
};