Storybook is the most popular UI component explorer! This is the website for https://storybook.js.org/.
Note: This is not the docs, those are located here.
Contributions welcome! If itβs something small like grammar or punctuation, open up a pull request. If itβs a bigger change or new feature, add an issue for discussion.
Workflow
- Feature idea or bugfix?
- Build new UI or tweak existing UI in Storybook first
- Integrate with Gatsby
- Ensure tests pass in Circle CI storybooks/frontpage
- Ensure site works and is QAed via Netlify previews
- Ensure no visual bugs in Chromatic storybooks/frontpage
- Pull request
The Storybook for Storybook contains every UI component. The UI is built following Component-Driven Development, a process that builds UIs from the βbottom upβ starting with components and ending with screens. That means contributors should compose UIs in Storybook before integration with the Gatsby app.
- yarn install
- yarn build
- yarn run storybook
Gatsby is used for basic routing and static site generation.
-
yarn start
to run the entire site -
yarn start:skip-addons
to skip building the addon catalog -
yarn start:docs-only
to mock the home page and build the docs pages
The content for the documentation section is in the docs/
subdirectory of the Storybook monorepo: https://github.com/storybookjs/storybook/tree/next/docs.
To run this app while editing those files, checkout both this repository and the monorepo, then:
-
Run the
yarn task
command and then select theSynchronize documentation (sync-docs)
option. -
Provide the path to the
frontpage
project.
With this, the folders storybook/docs
and frontpage/src/content/docs
will be synchronized, ensuring that any changes made to the documentation in the Storybook monorepo will be reflected in the Storybook website docs.
To run the website documentation, use the following command:
yarn start:docs-only
The project will be visualized in the browser at http://localhost:8000
Release notes are stored in the src/content/releases directory as .md
files. The name of the file corresponds with the version (major.minor) of the release and will be used to populate the link to the specific release from the releases page.
Within the release's .md
file, frontmatter is used to create a page title, while the rest of the content is parsed using gatsby-transformer-remark
and styled with selectors in src/styles/formatting.js
.
In development and with local production builds, environment variables can be configured with .env
files as explained here. Variables are prefixed with GATSBY_
when that variable needs to be available in client-side code.
In deploy previews and production deploys, these variables are set with Netlify's build variables.
Search within the docs is powered by DocSearch. In order for this to work, an environment variable is required:
GATSBY_ALGOLIA_API_KEY
How to setup on your machine:
- Create a .env.development file locally
- Get the key here: https://app.netlify.com/sites/storybook-frontpage/settings/deploys#environment
- Add
GATSBY_ALGOLIA_API_KEY=key
to the file from step 1
The site is crawled every 24 hours so any updates will be reflected in that amount of time.
The latest blog post is fetched from Ghost. You will need to add in order for this to work, an environment variable is required:
GHOST_STORYBOOK_API_KEY
How to setup on your machine:
- Create a .env.development file locally
- Get the key here: https://storybookblog.ghost.io/ghost
- Add
GHOST_STORYBOOK_API_KEY=key
to the file from step 1
This project uses these tools to make our job easier.
π« Deploys by Netlify
Main and branches are automatically deployed by Netlify every commit.
πΌ Visual testing by Chromatic
All stories in the Storybook are automatically visual tested on desktop and mobile each commit. Ensure all baselines are β accepted before merging.
π¦ Continuous integration by Circle CI
Every build a test suite runs. Ensure there are no errors before merging.