Polymer

It took a few years and a couple of trips around the block, but Web Components have truly arrived: they’re natively supported in Chrome and Safari today, with other browsers joining the party soon.

The Polymer (library) is still the most popular way to build your own Web Components. Polymer 2.0 has been updated to the final v1 Web Components specs, getting leaner, faster and more modular along the way – and offering a seamless upgrade path from Polymer

YOUTUBE cuoZenpQveQ It took a few years and a couple of trips around the block, but Web Components have truly arrived: they’re natively supported in Chrome and Safari today, wit..- youtube.com

In this session, you will learn how Web Components and Polymer can help you build performant, maintainable web apps that unlock the full potential of the browser. You’ll also hear about the latest advancements in the Polymer library that are bringing Polymer development closer to native than ever before, like ES6 class-based syntax and a suite of tools.

Developers and businesses are struggling to build fast mobile web apps to reach the next billion users. This talk explores the challenges faced and lessons learned as the Ionic Framework team ported over their collection of mobile-first UI components from a traditional frontend framework to standard Web Components, all in pursuit of faster, more accessible mobile web apps.

YOUTUBE UfD-k7aHkQE Using Web Components in Ionic (Polymer Summit 2017)