Component Styleguide
Introduction
Simple styleguide framework. Install component-styleguide into your styleguide project, and it will stay out of your way. It's inspired by http://patternlab.io, but is fundamentally different. And, I would say, much more flexible.
What is it?
Simple. You start out with a blank project. Your codebase contains just your own HTML templates and CSS stylesheets (and JavaScript if you want to). Put your files in some (configurable) directories, and there you have it.
See component-styleguide-example for an example setup (you could use this project as a boilerplate), and a live running example.
You can use it as a development server, and/or host it somewhere as a Node service.
Example Screenshot
Installation Steps
1. Install component-styleguide
npm install component-styleguide --save
2. Structure
Create a directory structure, like this:
.
├── components
│ ├── atoms
│ ├── molecules
│ └── organisms
└── data
3. Start
Write a minimal Node script (say index.js
):
var styleguide = require('component-styleguide');
styleguide();
And run it: node index.js
.
The styleguide is now running at http://localhost:3000.
4. Build Components
Put templates and partials in the components
directory and subdirectories (e.g. atoms
, molecules
, and organisms
, but this is not mandatory). They should be files ending with .html
and contain HTML snippets or Handlebars templates.
Here is a screencast of a quick & dirty installation:
And here's the result in the browser:
Configuration
You can work with the default settings straight away, but you might want to customize some things. By default:
- Use
atoms
,molecules
, andorganisms
,templates
andpages
, and they will show up in that order and as an icon. But you can name the directories any way you like. - The extension
html
is expected, but you can configure any other extension. - If you need stub data to feed to your templates, you can put
*.json
files in the/data
directory. - To use your stylesheets, put filenames in the
stylesheets
array, and make sure these files are/end up in the/compiled
directory (also configurable). - Same for
scripts
.
To specify alternative settings (showing default values here):
styleguide({
components: './components',
ext: 'html',
data: './data',
staticLocalDir: './compiled',
staticPath: '/compiled',
stylesheets: ['stylesheet.css'],
scripts: ['bundle.js'],
});
Command Line Interface
Alternatively, the styleguide can be started directly from the CLI without any scripting involved:
styleguide
Here's an example with default settings:
styleguide --components components --ext html --data data
You would need to either install it globally (i.e. npm install -g component-styleguide
), or use it from a package.json
script.
Details
Handlebars
Handlebars is used as the template engine.
Partials
Each template is automatically registered as a partial (e.g. you can reuse your {{> atoms/component}}
in templates).
Stub data
All "data" files are concatenated into one "context" for the templates. E.g. users.json
containing []
and profile.json
containing {}
will result in context data for the templates:
{
"users": [],
"profile": {}
}
Now, the {{#users}}
collection can be iterated over in any template.
If a there is a JSON file with the same name as the HTML file next to it, its data will be loaded in context data in priority over other data.
In this example, header.html
will get data from header.json
:
molecules
header.html
header.json
CSS & JS
You can organize and compile your CSS and JavaScript in any way you want, as long as they end up in e.g. /compiled
(the staticLocalDir
) to serve them with the components. I think it's a good idea to work directly in this folder, or compile SASS/LESS/... source files into e.g. compiled/stylesheet.css
and configure it as stylesheets: ['stylesheet.css']
.
Doh, yet another styleguide framework!?
Since I didn't like the approach of most styleguide tools, I created something I actually enjoy to use. It stays out of my way, so I can focus on the components.
Some solutions generate a styleguide from comments in the CSS. But I like to have separate templates, maybe some stub data, maybe some JavaScript. Other tools provide a boilerplate project, which may work fine at first, but it is hard to change or update the underlying styleguide framework later on.
As a Node.js dependency, features and bugs can be dealt with separately. You only need to update the component-styleguide
dependency (npm update
), without having to fork a repository and/or merge upstream changes, and it will happily continue to just serve your templates and static assets. Simple.