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Description
The straightforward inline editor toolbar offers a selection of themes, including Mani, Roman, Flat, Bootstrap, Tim, and Beagle. There are excellent wrappers available that facilitate the integration of MediumEditor into various frameworks and technology stacks. You can dynamically incorporate one or more elements into an already established MediumEditor instance. This process involves adding the specified element or an array of elements to the editor, ensuring they are initialized with the appropriate attributes and event handlers as if they were included during the editor's initial setup. If the toolbar is active, it can be manually instructed to refresh based on the user's current selection; this includes showing or hiding the toolbar, adjusting its position, and updating the state of the toolbar buttons to be enabled or disabled. Moreover, you have the ability to reset the content of all editor elements back to their original values when they were first added, with the option to reset the content of a specific editor element if desired. This flexibility allows for a personalized editing experience tailored to the user's needs.
Description
The Polymer library offers a robust set of functionalities for developing custom elements, streamlining the process to ensure they behave like standard DOM elements. Just like conventional DOM elements, Polymer elements can be created through a constructor or by utilizing document creation methods, and they can be configured via attributes or properties. Each instance can contain an internal DOM, adapt to changes in properties and attributes, and receive styling both from internal defaults and external sources, all while responding to methods that alter their internal state. When you register a custom element, you link a class to a specific custom element name, and the element includes lifecycle callbacks to effectively manage its various stages. Additionally, Polymer facilitates property declarations, allowing for seamless integration of your element's property API with the Polymer data system. By employing Shadow DOM, your element gains a locally scoped and encapsulated DOM tree, and Polymer can automatically generate and fill a shadow tree for your element derived from a DOM template, enhancing the modularity and reusability of your code. This combination of features not only simplifies the creation of custom elements but also ensures they integrate smoothly into the wider ecosystem of web components.
API Access
Has API
API Access
Has API
Integrations
Gerrit Code Review
Google Chrome
Microsoft Edge
Mozilla Firefox
Safari
Integrations
Gerrit Code Review
Google Chrome
Microsoft Edge
Mozilla Firefox
Safari
Pricing Details
No price information available.
Free Trial
Free Version
Pricing Details
Free
Free Trial
Free Version
Deployment
Web-Based
On-Premises
iPhone App
iPad App
Android App
Windows
Mac
Linux
Chromebook
Deployment
Web-Based
On-Premises
iPhone App
iPad App
Android App
Windows
Mac
Linux
Chromebook
Customer Support
Business Hours
Live Rep (24/7)
Online Support
Customer Support
Business Hours
Live Rep (24/7)
Online Support
Types of Training
Training Docs
Webinars
Live Training (Online)
In Person
Types of Training
Training Docs
Webinars
Live Training (Online)
In Person
Vendor Details
Company Name
MediumEditor
Website
yabwe.github.io/medium-editor/
Vendor Details
Company Name
Polymer
Founded
2014
Country
United States
Website
polymer-library.polymer-project.org/3.0/docs/devguide/feature-overview