Files
Colin Bares db915bf6c7 docs(methods): update component method documentation #4145 (#30495)
Issue number: resolves ionic-team/ionic-docs#4145

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## What is the current behavior?
Some component methods are missing param tags in the JSDoc comments.
Some comments are out of order and the method description is below the
last param description. Some back ticks are misplaced around words
resulting in incorrect formatting in the docs site.

## What is the new behavior?
Method documentation in app, action-sheet, alert, datetime, loading,
menu, modal, popover, reorder-group, router, searchbar, and toast now
include descriptions for all params, all method descriptions are placed
above param descriptions, and back ticks are formatted correctly. All
changes are within JSDoc comments so will result in a change to the docs
site but no functional change to any components.

## Does this introduce a breaking change?

- [ ] Yes
- [x] No

## Other information

In order to preview these changes I took the JSON generated from the
build on this branch and used it in the docusaurus script in place of
the fetch from unpkg. I set up a preview from my fork on Vercel -
https://ionic-docs-git-temptotestdocs-soundproofboots-projects.vercel.app/docs/components
. The change I made to the docusaurus script to use this temp data is
here - https://github.com/soundproofboot/ionic-docs/pull/1/files.
tempDocs.json is the output of the framework build after making these
changes.

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Co-authored-by: Brandy Smith <brandyscarney@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Brandy Smith <6577830+brandyscarney@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Maria Hutt <thetaPC@users.noreply.github.com>
2025-06-26 18:15:14 +00:00
..
2025-06-18 17:03:32 +00:00
2025-06-18 17:03:32 +00:00

@ionic/core

Ionic is an open source App Development Framework that makes it easy to build top quality Native and Progressive Web Apps with web technologies.

The Ionic Core package contains the Web Components that make up the reusable UI building blocks of Ionic Framework. These components are designed to be used in traditional frontend view libraries/frameworks (such as Stencil, React, Angular, or Vue), or on their own through traditional JavaScript in the browser.

Features

  • Tiny, highly optimized components built with Stencil
  • Styling for both iOS and Material Design
  • No build or compiling required
  • Simply add the static files to any project
  • Lazy-loaded components without configuration
  • Asynchronous rendering
  • Theming through CSS Variables

How to use

Vanilla HTML

Easiest way to start using Ionic Core is by adding a script tag to the CDN:

<script type="module" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@ionic/core/dist/ionic/ionic.esm.js"></script>
<script nomodule src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@ionic/core/dist/ionic/ionic.js"></script>
<link href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@ionic/core/css/ionic.bundle.css" rel="stylesheet">

Any Ionic component added to the webpage will automatically load. This includes writing the component tag directly in HTML, or using JavaScript such as document.createElement('ion-toggle').

Additionally, within this package is a dist/ionic.js file and accompanying dist/ionic/ directory. These are the same files which are used by the CDN, and they're available in this package so they can be apart of an app's local development.

Framework Bindings

The @ionic/core package can be used in simple HTML, or by vanilla JavaScript without any framework at all. Ionic also has packages that make it easier to integrate Ionic into a framework's traditional ecosystem and patterns. (However, at the lowest-level framework bindings are still just using Ionic Core and Web Components).

Custom Elements Build

In addition to the default, self lazy-loading components built by Stencil, this package also comes with each component exported as a stand-alone custom element within @ionic/core/components. Each component extends HTMLElement, and does not lazy-load itself. Instead, this package is useful for projects already using a bundler such as Webpack or Rollup. While all components are available to be imported, the custom elements build also ensures bundlers only import what's used, and tree-shakes any unused components.

Below is an example of importing ion-badge, and initializing Ionic so it is able to correctly load the "mode", such as Material Design or iOS. Additionally, the initialize({...}) function can receive the Ionic config.

import { defineCustomElement } from "@ionic/core/components/ion-badge.js";
import { initialize } from "@ionic/core/components";

// Initializes the Ionic config and `mode` behavior
initialize();

//  Defines the `ion-badge` web component
defineCustomElement();

Notice how we import from @ionic/core/components as opposed to @ionic/core. This helps bundlers pull in only the code that is needed.

The defineCustomElement function will automatically define the component as well as any child components that may be required.

For example, if you wanted to use ion-modal, you would do the following:

import { defineCustomElement } from "@ionic/core/components/ion-modal.js";
import { initialize } from "@ionic/core/components";

// Initializes the Ionic config and `mode` behavior
initialize();

//  Defines the `ion-modal` and child `ion-backdrop` web components.
defineCustomElement();

The defineCustomElement function will define ion-modal, but it will also define ion-backdrop, which is a component that ion-modal uses internally.

Using Overlay Controllers

When using an overlay controller, developers will need to define the overlay component before it can be used. Below is an example of using modalController:

import { defineCustomElement } from '@ionic/core/components/ion-modal.js';
import { initialize, modalController } from '@ionic/core/components';

initialize();
defineCustomElement();

const showModal = async () => {
  const modal = await modalController.create({ ... });
  
  ...
}

How to contribute

Check out the CONTRIBUTE guide

License