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openui5-pwa-sample

You can build Progressive Web Apps with any HTML/JS framework and OpenUI5 is not an exception. This example shows how to easily build a simple PWA with sap.m library.

The demo is a simple TODO list application. Add new tasks with the input field at the bottom of the screen. The tasks are stored locally and the application works online as well as offline without any difference. You may install it on the home screen of a touch device like a native full screen application.

Local Development Setup:

This sample is a static HTML application. There are different possibilities to test it locally:

Clone this repo and:

  • with Chrome Web Server: Run the web server from the src folder
  • with Node.js: Run npm install and npm run serve
  • with a trial SAP Cloud or any other Cloud-Foundry account: Change the application name in the manifest.yml and upload the app with cf push

Steps to create a PWA with OpenUI5

Build the application

This sample is a simple one-page OpenUI5 TODO application with index.html as a starting point. Use it as a template for your own application. The todo-app.js contains the logic. Replace it with something more useful.

Design, create and attach a service worker

A service worker is a prerequisite for a PWA. The main purpose of it is to cache application resources (and data) for the offline use on mobile devices. One can use different caching strategies. The service-worker.js template in this sample caches application specific resources during the install event and OpenUI5 libraries during the fetch event, on the first network response. This scenario is neither complete nor ideal and should serve just as a starting point example.

Create icons and a splash screen, add meta tags

A set of good looking icons is an essential part of a PWA. The icons folder contains a minimal set of images.

Normally, an OpenUI5 application starts with an empty HTML file and generates contents dynamically. One of the PWA requirements is to show some static content or a splash screen immediately, before all JavaScript libraries are loaded and executed. The sample contains some static HTML that is replaced with the dynamic contents after the application is loaded.

Do not forget to include PWA related meta tags to the HTML head of your application. Use index.html as a reference.

Create a Web App Manifest

Create a Web App Manifest (manifest.json) and reference it in the HTML header of your applications index.html. For more details, see the Web App Manifest documentation.

Test your app

After all the steps above are performed, run the application within a Chrome Desktop browser and run a PWA audit in Chrome devtools. If you see an image like below, everything is OK and you can submit your application.

100% Progressive Web App

Limitations

OpenUI5 still uses synchronous XMLHttpRequests to load messagebundle.properties files with default UI labels and text. Due to the fact that a service worker cannot handle synchronous XHR, the texts cannot be cached and may be unavailable in offline mode. You need to provide custom labels for such default texts.

This sample uses the LocalStorage for persistence. Caching of application data and implementation of offline CRUD patterns are not considered here.

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How to build a Progressive Web App with OpenUI5

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  • JavaScript 78.3%
  • HTML 21.7%