Thanks for getting involved with Reach UI development!
https://reacttraining.com/reach-ui/
Reach UI is built and tested with Yarn. Please follow their install instructions to get Yarn installed on your system.
Then, run these commands:
git clone [email protected]:reach/reach-ui.git
cd reach-ui
yarn install
yarn build
yarn build # builds all packages
yarn start # starts storybook server
yarn test # runs tests in all packages
First do the steps in "Getting started", then start the Storybook server:
yarn start
Next, put a file in packages/<component-dir>/examples/<name>.example.js
and make it look like this:
import React from "react";
// The name of the example (always name the variable `name`)
let name = "Basic";
// The example to render (always name the function `Example`)
function Example() {
return <div>Cool cool cool</div>;
}
// Assign the name to the example and then export it as a named constant
Example.story = { name };
export const Comp = Example;
// Default export an object with the title matching the name of the Reach package
export default { title: "Dialog" };
Now you can edit the files in packages/*
and storybook will automatically reload your changes.
Note: If you change an internal dependency you will need to run yarn build
again. For example, if working on MenuButton
requires a change to Rect
(an internal dependency of MenuButton
), you will need to run yarn build
for the changes to Rect
to show up in your MenuButton
example.
First do the steps in "Getting Started", then:
yarn test
Or if you want to run the tests as you edit files:
yarn test --watch
Often you'll want to just test the component you're working on:
cd packages/<component-path>
yarn test --watch
The components to be built come from the the Aria Practices Design Patterns and Widgets, with a few exceptions. Here is a table of the components and their status.
✅ - Released
🛠 - Building
Status | Name |
---|---|
✅ | Accordion |
✅ | Alert |
✅ | Alert Dialog |
✅ | Checkbox |
✅ | Combo Box |
✅ | Dialog (Modal) |
✅ | Disclosure |
🛠 | Hover Card |
✅ | Listbox |
✅ | Menu Button |
🛠 | Radio Group |
✅ | Slider |
✅ | Tabs |
🛠 | Toggletip |
✅ | Tooltip |
This is our current release process. It's not perfect, but it has almost the right balance of manual + automation for me. We might be able to put some of this in a script...
# First, run the build locally and make sure there are no problems
# and that all the tests pass:
$ yarn build
$ yarn test
# Generate the changelog and copy it somewhere for later. We'll
# automate this part eventually, but for now you can get the changelog
# with:
$ yarn changes
# Then create a new version and git tag locally. Don't push yet!
$ yarn ver [version]
# Take a look around and make sure everything is as you'd expect.
# You can inspect everything from the commit that lerna made with:
$ git log -p
# If something needs to be changed, you can undo the commit and
# delete the tag that lerna created and try again.
# If everything looks good, push to GitHub along with the new tag:
$ git push origin master --follow-tags
# Open up travis-ci.com/reach/reach-ui and watch the build. There will
# be 2 builds, one for the push to the master branch and one for the
# new tag. The tag build will run the build and all the tests and then
# automatically publish to npm if everything passes. If there's a
# problem, we have to figure out how to fix manually.
# Paste the changelog into the release on GitHub. The release is
# complete … huzzah!
You need to be careful when publishing a new package because the lerna publish
on Travis CI will fail for new packages. To get around this, you should publish a 0.0.0
version of the package manually ahead of time. Then the release from CI will be ok. This is really janky but AFAICT the only workaround.
Stuff I'd like to improve:
- Automate changelog generation and GitHub release from CI
- Document how we're using GitHub PRs to generate the changelog somewhere
The website is a Gatsby app in the website
directory. It automatically deploys to https://reacttraining.com/reach-ui/ when the website
branch is updated.
This project exists thanks to our contributors and financial backers.