A starting point for multi-device web development
Web Starter Kit is a starting point for multi-screen web development. It encompasses opinionated recommendations on boilerplate and tooling for building an experience that works great across multiple devices. We help you stay productive and aligned with the best practices outlined in Google's Web Fundamentals.
- Mobile-optimized HTML boilerplate
- Responsive multi-device layout
- Visual component style guide
- gulp.js build tooling (optional)
- LiveReload
- Cross-device synchronization of clicks, scrolls, navigation, and form-filling (thanks to BrowserSync)
- Image optimization
- JavaScript minification and optimization
- CSS minification and optimization
- HTML minification
- PageSpeed Insights performance reporting
- CSS auto-prefixing
Download the kit or clone this repository and build on what we include in the app
directory.
We provide 2 HTML starting points, from which you can choose:
index.html
- the default starting point, containing layout and a slide-out menubasic.html
- includes no layout
If you would like to use the optional tooling we provide, make sure your system has Node.js, Ruby, gulp.js and Sass installed.
Let's check to see if you already have Node installed. Bring up a terminal and type node --version
. If Node responds, and if it shows a version at or above v0.10.x, proceed to checking if you have Ruby installed too. If you require Node, go to nodejs.org and click on the big green Install button.
Bring up a terminal and type ruby --version
. If Ruby responds, and if it shows a version number at or above 1.8.7 then type gem --version
. If you don't see any errors, proceed to installing the Sass gem. If you require Ruby, it can be installed from the Ruby downloads page.
Bring up a terminal and type sass --version
. If Sass is installed it should return a version number at or above 3.3.x. If you don't see any errors, proceed to the Gulp installation. If you need to install Sass, see the command-line instructions on the Sass installation page.
Bring up a terminal and type gulp --version
. If Gulp is installed it should return a version number at or above 3.5.x. If you don't see any errors, proceed to the Gulp commands section. If you need to install Gulp, open up a terminal and type in the following:
$ npm install --global gulp
This will install Gulp globally. Depending on your user account, you may need to gain elevated permissions using sudo
(i.e sudo npm install --global gulp
). Next, install the local dependencies Web Starter Kit requires:
$ npm install
That's it! You should now have everything needed to use the Gulp tools in Web Starter Kit.
You can now use Gulp with the following commands to stay productive during development:
$ gulp serve
This outputs an IP address you can use to locally test and another that can be used on devices connected to your network.
$ gulp
Build and optimize the current project, ready for deployment. This includes linting as well as image, script, stylesheet and HTML optimization and minification.
$ gulp pagespeed
Runs the deployed (public) version of your site against the PageSpeed Insights API to help you stay on top of where you can improve.
Web Starter Kit strives to give you a high performance starting point out of the box and we actively work on delivering the best PageSpeed Insights score and frame-rate possible.
In terms of CSS, opting to just use the minimal layout (main.css, h5bp.css) weighs in at ~7KB before modifications are made. Opting to use the Style Guide styles (the default) will take this up to ~39KB. It is your choice which path makes the most sense for your project, however notes on excluding Style Guide styles are in our gulpfile.
At present, we officially aim to support the following browsers:
- IE10, IE11, IE Mobile 10
- FF 30, 31
- Chrome 34, 35
- Safari 7, 8
- Opera 23, 24
- iOS Safari 7, 8
- Opera Coast
- Android / Chrome 4.4, 4.4.3
- BlackBerry 10
This is not to say that Web Starter Kit cannot be used in browsers older than those reflected, but merely that our focus will be on ensuring our layouts work great in the above.
If you find yourself running into issues during installation or running the tools, please check our Troubleshooting guide and then open an issue. We would be happy to discuss how they can be solved.
If you would prefer not to use any of our tooling, delete the following files from the project: package.json
, gulpfile.js
, .jshintrc
. You can now safely use the boilerplate with an alternative build-system or no build-system at all if you choose.
Web Starter Kit is inspired by Mobile HTML5 Boilerplate and Yeoman's generator-gulp-webapp, having taken input from contributors to both projects during development. Our FAQs attempt to answer commonly asked questions about the project.
Contributions, questions and comments are all welcome and encouraged. For code contributions to Web Starter Kit, please see our Contribution guide before submitting a patch. For issues or patches related to the homepage, please file an issue over on Web Fundamentals.
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Copyright 2014 Google Inc