| name: | ai-elements |
|---|---|
| description: | Create new AI chat interface components for the ai-elements library following established composable patterns, shadcn/ui integration, and Vercel AI SDK conventions. Use when creating new components in packages/elements/src or when the user asks to add a new component to ai-elements. |
AI Elements is a component library and custom registry built on top of shadcn/ui to help you build AI-native applications faster. It provides pre-built components like conversations, messages and more.
Installing AI Elements is straightforward and can be done in a couple of ways. You can use the dedicated CLI command for the fastest setup, or integrate via the standard shadcn/ui CLI if you've already adopted shadcn's workflow.
Here are some basic examples of what you can achieve using components from AI Elements.
Before installing AI Elements, make sure your environment meets the following requirements:
AI_GATEWAY_API_KEY to your env.local so you don't have to use an API key
from every provider. AI Gateway also gives $5 in usage per month so you can
experiment with models. You can obtain an API key
here.You can install AI Elements components using either the AI Elements CLI or the shadcn/ui CLI. Both achieve the same result: adding the selected component’s code and any needed dependencies to your project.
The CLI will download the component’s code and integrate it into your project’s
directory (usually under your components folder). By default, AI Elements
components are added to the @/components/ai-elements/ directory (or whatever
folder you’ve configured in your shadcn components settings).
After running the command, you should see a confirmation in your terminal that the files were added. You can then proceed to use the component in your code.
Once an AI Elements component is installed, you can import it and use it in your application like any other React component. The components are added as part of your codebase (not hidden in a library), so the usage feels very natural.
After installing AI Elements components, you can use them in your application like any other React component. For example:
"use client";
import {
Message,
MessageContent,
MessageResponse,
} from "@/components/ai-elements/message";
import { useChat } from "@ai-sdk/react";
const Example = () => {
const { messages } = useChat();
return (
<>
{messages.map(({ role, parts }, index) => (
<Message from={role} key={index}>
<MessageContent>
{parts.map((part, i) => {
switch (part.type) {
case "text":
return (
<MessageResponse key={`${role}-${i}`}>
{part.text}
</MessageResponse>
);
}
})}
</MessageContent>
</Message>
))}
</>
);
};
export default Example;
In the example above, we import the Message component from our AI Elements
directory and include it in our JSX. Then, we compose the component with the
MessageContent and MessageResponse subcomponents. You can style or configure
the component just as you would if you wrote it yourself – since the code lives
in your project, you can even open the component file to see how it works or
make custom modifications.
All AI Elements components take as many primitive attributes as possible. For
example, the Message component extends HTMLAttributes<HTMLDivElement>, so
you can pass any props that a div supports. This makes it easy to extend the
component with your own styles or functionality.
After installation, no additional setup is needed. The component’s styles (Tailwind CSS classes) and scripts are already integrated. You can start interacting with the component in your app immediately.
For example, if you'd like to remove the rounding on Message, you can go to
components/ai-elements/message.tsx and remove rounded-lg as follows:
export const MessageContent = ({
children,
className,
...props
}: MessageContentProps) => (
<div
className={cn(
"flex flex-col gap-2 text-sm text-foreground",
"group-[.is-user]:bg-primary group-[.is-user]:text-primary-foreground group-[.is-user]:px-4 group-[.is-user]:py-3",
className,
)}
{...props}
>
<div className="is-user:dark">{children}</div>
</div>
);
Make sure your project is configured correctly for shadcn/ui in Tailwind 4 -
this means having a globals.css file that imports Tailwind and includes the
shadcn/ui base styles.
Double-check that:
package.json lives).npx ai-elements@latest
If all else fails, feel free to open an issue on GitHub.
Ensure your app is using the same data-theme system that shadcn/ui and AI
Elements expect. The default implementation toggles a data-theme attribute on
the <html> element. Make sure your tailwind.config.js is using class or data-
selectors accordingly:
Check the file exists. If it does, make sure your tsconfig.json has a proper
paths alias for @/ i.e.
{ "compilerOptions": { "baseUrl": ".", "paths": { "@/*": ["./*"] } } }
If none of these answers help, open an issue on GitHub and someone will be happy to assist.
See the references/ folder for detailed documentation on each component.