This guide is currently optimised for usage with sku, since it's configured to support Braid out of the box. If your project has a custom build setup, you'll need some extra guidance from project contributors to configure your bundler.
In your sku project, first install this library:
$ npm install --save braid-design-system
At the very top of your application, import the reset, required theme and the BraidProvider
component.
WARNING: The reset styles must be imported first to avoid CSS ordering issues.
For example:
import 'braid-design-system/reset'; // <-- Must be first
import jobStreetTheme from 'braid-design-system/themes/jobStreet';
import { BraidProvider, Text } from 'braid-design-system';
// ...etc.
Finally, render the BraidProvider
component, providing the imported theme via the theme
prop:
import 'braid-design-system/reset';
import jobStreetTheme from 'braid-design-system/themes/jobStreet';
import { BraidProvider, Text } from 'braid-design-system';
export default () => (
<BraidProvider theme={jobStreetTheme}>
<Text>Hello World!</Text>
</BraidProvider>
);
If you're rendering within the context of another application, you may want to opt out of the provided body styles, which set the background color and reset margin and padding:
<BraidProvider theme={jobStreetTheme} styleBody={false}>
<Text>Hello World!</Text>
</BraidProvider>
If you'd like to customise the technical implementation of all Link
and TextLink
components from Braid, you can pass a custom component to the linkComponent
prop on BraidProvider
. For example, if you wanted to ensure that all relative links are React Router links:
import React from 'react';
import { Link as ReactRouterLink } from 'react-router-dom';
import { BraidProvider, makeLinkComponent } from 'braid-design-system';
import wireframe from 'braid-design-system/themes/wireframe';
// First create the custom link implementation:
const CustomLink = makeLinkComponent(({ href, ...restProps }, ref) =>
href[0] === '/' ? (
<ReactRouterLink ref={ref} to={href} {...restProps} />
) : (
<a ref={ref} href={href} {...restProps} />
),
);
// Then pass it to BraidProvider:
export const App = () => (
<BraidProvider theme={wireframe} linkComponent={CustomLink}>
...
</BraidProvider>
);
If you require multiple themes and want to code split them, you can subsitute the BraidProvider
with the BraidLoadableProvider
, passing it the necessary themeName
at runtime. Remove any explicit theme imports you may have.
import 'braid-design-system/reset';
import { BraidLoadableProvider, Text } from 'braid-design-system';
export default ({ themeName }) => (
<BraidLoadableProvider themeName={themeName}>
<Text>Hello World!</Text>
</BraidLoadableProvider>
);
If you're migrating from an existing style guide, please refer to the Style Guide Migration guide.
This project uses Yarn for development dependencies.
Installing with yarn
is required to ensure dependencies match the current yarn.lock.
$ yarn
$ yarn start
Start a local Storybook server:
$ yarn storybook
Refer to CONTRIBUTING.md.
Chromatic for providing component screenshot testing, powered by Storybook.
MIT.