- Getting started
- Common tasks
- Dependency management
- Package architecture and layout
- Commit conventions
- Coding style
- Class names
- Sass documentation
- Start a new
block
orelement
? - Red flags
- Files and folders
- Defining markups for components and their variants
- Defining markup with no conditional or data interpolations
- Defining markup with conditionals or data interpolations
- Working on JavaScript-framework-specific styles
- Using
npm link
/yarn link
- Pointing NPM dependency of
carbon-components
right to the source code
- Maintainers
- FAQ
Carbon is built using a collection of packages all built in the same Git repository. You might have heard this setup described as a monorepo.
As a result, we use two pieces of tooling to help us manage installing dependencies and publishing our packages. These include:
- Yarn workspaces for handling dependencies across all packages
- Lerna for publishing packages, tagging versions, and more
In order for you to install all the dependencies in this project, you'll need to install Yarn and run the following command in your terminal:
yarn install
This will install all of the dependencies for every package in our project. In addition, it allows us to link between packages that we are developing.
This strategy is particularly useful during development, and tooling like Lerna will pick up on when packages are linked in this way and will automatically update versions when publishing new versions of packages.
Next up, you'll most likely want to build all of the package files so that things don't fail while you are working on a package. To do this, you can run the following command:
yarn build
Afterwards, you should be good to go! For more information about how we handle dependencies, take a look at our write-up here.
While working on Carbon, here are some of the top-level tasks that you might want to run:
Command | Usage |
---|---|
yarn build |
Uses lerna to run the build script in each package |
yarn clean |
Resets the state of the project by removing all node_modules and running the clean script in each package |
yarn doctoc |
Runs doctoc on all files in the doctoc directory |
yarn format , yarn format:diff |
Format files using Prettier, check if files have been formatted |
yarn sync |
Sync package files across the project |
yarn lint |
Run eslint on files in the project |
In addition, you can use yarn
to run bin
files using the yarn <bin>
syntax. For example, if you wanted to use lerna
to run a script in every
package you could do the following:
# Access $(yarn bin)/lerna and pass `run build` to the executable
yarn lerna run build
Tests are written in Mocha/Chai. You can see if your code is covered by looking at carbon-components/tests/coverage/*/index.html after running test.
If your change may hit some browser quirks, use -b
option, like:
gulp test:unit -b IE -b Firefox
(Other browsers tests can run with are: Safari
, Chrome
and ChromeHeadless
)
If you are very sure that your change affects a specific set of components, you
can use -f
option, like:
gulp test:unit -f tests/spec/fab_spec.js
Other options for testing are:
-d
/--debug
: Stop generating code coverage report. Useful to debug your code when running test.-k
/--keepalive
: Keep running test runner even after test ends. Test will restart running when you make changes to any test files or any files under test.-v
/--verbose
: Let Karma emit detailed log.
In light of potential npm
security issues
[1]
[2],
we are addressing some of the issues with installing dependencies from a live
registry by taking advantage of
Yarn's offline feature.
The majority of steps taken are inspired by
this tweet from Lee
Byron.
We specify a .yarnc
file in this project that sets the path for Yarn's offline
mirror to the folder .yarn/offline-mirror
. This folder contains all the
tarballs for the packages that the project uses. What this allows us to do is
run yarn install --offline
in our Continuous Integration environment so that
we don't have to fetch from the live registry in our builds.
If a package in elements is shipping Sass-based files, then it will follow a certain number of conventions.
The first convention is that each of these packages will have a scss
folder
that contains all the Sass files for the package. For example, @carbon/colors
would have a folder at @carbon/colors/scss
in the import path for Sass.
To include the entire package, there are two options within this scss
folder:
the index.scss
entrypoint for modules and an entrypoint for inline support.
The index.scss
entrypoint would be found at @carbon/colors/scss/index.scss
and would work for teams that are using tools like eyeglass or have already
setup node-sass
's includePaths
option to include node_modules
.
The other entrypoint option is for inline support. This option will work without
having to use eyeglass or something like node-sass
's includePaths
option.
Each package that ships a scss
folder will include this entrypoint, and the
name will reflect the package name. For example, @carbon/colors
would have an
entrypoint available at @carbon/colors/scss/colors.scss
.
The entrypoints of our Sass packages will output CSS (side-effects) by default,
unless there is no corresponding CSS to output. These side-effects help with
quickly using a package, but sometimes an application developer will want to
control behavior in order to manage side-effects. For these cases, we expose
additional files that you can include in your project, most notably a common
scss/mixins.scss
file.
For example, in @carbon/colors
we can import the carbon--colors
mixin by
importing @carbon/colors/scss/mixins.scss
. These types of files are guaranteed
to have no, or minimal, side-effects. The only side-effects that are emitted are
global variable initializations as this is required behavior in newer versions
of Sass.
Using these mixins.scss
entrypoints allows you as an application developer to
control when these side-effects are applied in your project.
This project follows a structured format for writing commit messages. The main benefit of this approach is that we can use these details to automatically generate things like changelogs, in addition to clarifying what changes correspond to when looking at our Git history.
Parts of this section are duplicated from Angular's commit conventions.
Each commit message consists of a header, a body and a footer. The header has a specific format that includes a type, a scope and a subject:
<type>(<scope>): <subject>
<BLANK LINE>
<body>
<BLANK LINE>
<footer>
The header is mandatory and the scope of the header is optional. There are a few validation rules that we also enforce, namely that:
- The header must always be fewer than 72 characters
- Any line in the commit body must be fewer than 80 characters
Most of these rules are to help with integration of git
with common tools.
Note: we check for this commit format using a tool called
commitlint
.
Must be one of the following:
- build: Changes that affect the build system or external dependencies
- chore: Changes that do not affect the meaning of the code (white-space, formatting, missing semi-colons, etc.)
- ci: Changes to our CI configuration files and scripts
- docs: Documentation only changes
- feat: A new feature
- fix: A bug fix
- perf: A code change that improves performance
- refactor: A code change that neither fixes a bug nor adds a feature
- revert: A code change that reverses a previous commit
- test: Adding missing tests or correcting existing tests
The subject contains a succinct description of the change:
- use the imperative, present tense: "change" not "changed" nor "changes"
- don't capitalize the first letter
- no dot (.) at the end
Just as in the subject, use the imperative, present tense: "change" not "changed" nor "changes". The body should include the motivation for the change and contrast this with previous behavior.
The footer should contain any information about Breaking Changes.
Breaking Changes should start with the word BREAKING CHANGE: with a space or two newlines. The rest of the commit message is then used for this.
Feature (`feat`)
// Adding new functionality to a piece of code is considered a feature.
// This can be seen as extending an existing API
-function MyComponent({ propA }) {
+function MyComponent({ propA, propB }) {
// ...
}
Bug fix (`fix`)
// Updating an implementation to correct a fault in the existing code is
// considered a bug fix
function add(a, b) {
- return a - b;
+ return a + b;
}
Chore (`chore`)
Running things like formatting, or generally any project clean-up tasks, can be considered a chore that we are doing to keep things up-to-date.
Prefix all class names with #{$prefix}--
in SCSS, which is replaced with
bx--
by default, and design systems inheriting Carbon can override. This
prefix prevents potential conflicts with class names from the user.
HTML
<div
class="bx--inline-notification bx--inline-notification--error"
role="alert"
>
<div class="bx--inline-notification__details">...</div>
</div>
SCSS
.#{$prefix}--inline-notification {
...
}
.#{$prefix}--inline-notification__details {
...
}
Follow BEM naming convention for classes. Again, the only thing we do
differently is prefix all classes with #{$prefix}--
.
.#{$prefix}--block
.#{$prefix}--block__element
.#{$prefix}--block--modifier
Avoid nesting selectors, this will make it easier to maintain in the future.
// Don't do this
.#{$prefix}--inline-notification {
.#{$prefix}--btn {
&:hover {
svg {
...
}
}
}
}
// Do this instead
.#{$prefix}--inline-notification .#{$prefix}--btn {
&:hover svg {
...
}
}
}
SassDoc is used to document the Carbon Sass source.
SassDoc annotations start each line with ///
; do not use ///
in non-SassDoc
comments.
For consistency, capitalize types (used in @type
, @param
, @return
) and
descriptions (used in @param
, @return
, @deprecated
, @example
, @link
).
The following annotations are used:
Required annotations
-
Description - can be one line or multiple lines
-
@access
-public
orprivate
, where public items make up our public API -
@group
- typically a package or component name -
@type
- allowed on variables, (e.g.Map
,Color
,Number
) -
@param
- allowed on functions and mixins, include the type, name, and description, with a default value if there is one (e.g.@param {Map} $breakpoints [$carbon--grid-breakpoints] - A map of breakpoints where the key is the name
) -
@return
- allowed on functions, include the type and description (e.g.@return {Number} In px
) -
@alias
- do not include the$
if aliasing a variable -
@content
- allowed on mixins, describe the usage of content -
@deprecated
- context around possible replacements or when the item will no longer be availableOptional annotations
-
@example
- if the usage isn't straight forward or there are multiple use cases -
@link
- if there's a related link to referenceExamples
// Variable example
/// Primary interactive color; Primary buttons
/// @type Color
/// @access public
/// @group @carbon/themes
$interactive-01: map-get($carbon--theme, interactive-01) !default;
// Mixin example
/// Create the container for a grid. Will cause full-bleed for the grid unless
/// max-width properties are added with `make-container-max-widths`
/// @param {Map} $breakpoints [$carbon--grid-breakpoints] - A map of breakpoints where the key is the name
/// @access private
/// @group @carbon/grid
@mixin carbon--make-container($breakpoints: $carbon--grid-breakpoints) {
}
// Function example
/// Compute the type size for the given type scale step
/// @param {Number} $step - Type scale step
/// @return {Number} In px
/// @access public
/// @group @carbon/type
@function carbon--get-type-size($step) {
}
A nested element can use a new block name as long as the styles are independent of the parent.
<div class="bx--component">
<button class="bx--component-button">Button</button>
</div>
☝️ The #{$prefix}--component-button
class implies that this button has
independent styles from its parent. Generally, it's preferred to start a new
block.
Avoid names with multiple __element
names:
- ❌
.#{$prefix}--card__list__item
- ✅
.#{$prefix}--card-item
- ✅
.#{$prefix}--card__item
All components belong in src/components
in their own folder.
Name files and folders using singular form; not plural.
button
- button.hbs
- _button.scss
- button.js
- button.config.js
Also note that all variants of a component can live in a single HBS, SCSS and JS file respectively. For example, while there are many button variants (primary, secondary, etc.), they're all contained in those single source files in the button folder.
There are two ways to define markups for components and their variants:
- Defining markup with no conditional or data interpolations
- Defining markup with conditionals or data interpolations
To define markup with no conditional or data interpolation you will need to add
a .hbs
file to the component directory. No .config.js
file in the component
directory is required in this case. One thing to note is that If there is a
.hbs
file whose basename is exactly the same as the component name, other
.hbs
files has to be in componentname--variantname.hbs
format.
Defining markup with conditionals or data interpolations requires creating
.config.js
file, which is a
JavaScript module format of Fractal configuration,
in component directory. .hbs
files are rendered with the data given via
context
property in variants[n]
(below).
Supported
properties in .config.js
are the following:
default
: The default variant namevariants
- An array of objects, supporting the following properties:name
: The variant namelabel
: The variant name shown in dev env UInotes
: A short explainer the variant shown in dev env UIcontext
: The data used for rendering.hbs
view
: The basename of the.hbs
file for variant markup (Unlike default Fractal environment, this property should point to the basename of a.hbs
file underdemo
directory orsrc
directory, without its path)preview
: The basename of the.hbs
file for the markup that lays out the variant markup, in "full render" mode (Unlike default Fractal environment, this property should point to the basename of a.hbs
file underdemo
directory orsrc
directory, without@
symbol)meta
: Some metadata. Carbon vanilla development environment reads the following ones specifically:linkOnly
: Only full-page demo is alloweduseIframe
: Use of<iframe>
for non full-page demoxVersionOnly
: Supports "experimental" theme onlyxVersionNotSupported
: "Experimental" theme is not supported
What .hbs
file is used for rendering a variant is determined by searching for
.hbs
files in demo
or src
directory and find one whose basename matches
one of the following (the priority is the following order):
view
property invariants[n]
- Variant handle, which takes a format of
componentname--variantname
format - Component handle, which is
componentname
JavaScript-framework-specific is not recommended as we strive to create styles that are framework-neutral. However, there are some rare cases where framework-specific cannot be avoided, and some of those make sense to be in maintained by core style library here.
There are a couple ways to work on framework-specific style.
This is the most straightforward way. When in the directory of your
carbon-components
folder, run the following command:
yarn link
You should see a success message similar to:
success Registered "carbon-components".
info You can now run `yarn link "carbon-components"` in the projects where you want to use this package and it will be used instead.
Now, go to the folder where carbon-components-angular
is located and run:
yarn link carbon-components
You should see a success message similar to:
success Using linked package for "carbon-components".
The yarn link
command will allow us to point the carbon-components
package
under node_modules
to the folder on our filesystem. So, if we make a change in
carbon-components
and re-compile the project it will update in the Storybook
environment for carbon-components-angular
.
In addition, if you would like to have your changes to styles automatically
compile and update Storybook you can run the following command in the
carbon-components
folder on your machine:
yarn gulp watch -s
This will run the watch
command in gulpfile.js
. As a result, whenever you
make a change to the project styles it will automatically copy over into the
scss
folder which Storybook uses in carbon-components-angular
.
Though above approach is the most straightforward, it involves an overhead of
having to run build process at carbon-components
, in addition to one at
framework variant repo, upon every Sass code change.
To avoid such overhead, you can point NPM dependency of carbon-components
right to the source code, though there is a caveat that our future change to
directory structure, etc. may make such steps no longer work. Here are the
steps:
> cd /path/to/carbon-components-angular/node_modules/carbon-components
> mv scss scss.orig
> ln -s /path/to/carbon-components/src scss
Then edits of .scss
files in /path/to/carbon-components/src
will be
reflected to the development environment of your framework variant repository.
You don't need to do anything in carbon-components
side.
We get work submitted by the IBM Brand team, along with other designers at IBM, that contributes new or updated assets to our icons or pictograms packages. When you are requested to review these Pull Requests, here are some common things to look for:
- Do the assets follow a param-case naming convention?
If not, we'll need to request changes so that they are named using the
param-case
convention.
- Is the CI check failing because of missing metadata?
If so, you will need to help out the contributor by going into the package and
running node tasks/scaffold.js
to seed the metadata information required for
the contribution.
Note: the scaffold task will only apply to the main metadata file, for new icons category information will have to be added by hand
- Is the CI check failing because of a merge conflict?
If so, you will need to help out the contributor by resolving the merge conflicts for the Pull Request.
- Is the CI check failing because of a snapshot change?
If so, you will need to help out the contributor by updating the snapshot based on the changes. To update snapshot, you'll need to rebuild the relevant packages and then run Jest.
For example, if icons changed you will want to run the following commands:
yarn lerna run build --scope='@carbon/icons-react' --include-dependencies
yarn test:e2e -u
If pictograms changed, it would be:
yarn lerna run build --scope='@carbon/pictograms-react' --include-dependencies
yarn test:e2e -u
- Does the Pull Request have an appropriate title?
If not, then you will need to update it to the correct commit convention for the contribution.
- Does the Pull Request remove an asset that used to exist?
If so, remind the contributor that we can only remove assets in a major release.
If an asset needs to be removed, they should add the asset back in under its
original name and add it to the corresponding deprecated.yml
file. They can
still contribute the newly named asset, and it is recommended that they specify
the replacement for the icon in deprecated.yml
under the reason
field.
Mistakes totally happen, and sometimes we'll need to figure out a strategy to remove a component from the system. When this happens, we need to make sure that users of Carbon know that:
- The component is going to continue to work, deprecating a component does not break any existing code
- That we're going to remove this component in the next major release to give them enough time to prepare
In certain cases, we'll also want to support bug fixes for deprecated components. Most of the time we will state that deprecated components will no longer receive priority fixes, but we'll still accept outside contributions.
In order to deprecate a component in our React codebase, we have the following pattern that we tend to use:
// SomeComponent.js
// React imports
import warning from 'warning';
let didWarnAboutDeprecation = false;
function SomeComponent() {
if (__DEV__) {
warning(
didWarnAboutDeprecation,
'The `SomeComponent` component has been deprecated and will be removed ' +
'in the next major release of `carbon-components-react`'
);
didWarnAboutDeprecation = true;
}
}
Note: if available, you should add a closing sentence specifying what component to use instead, or share a link for more information. This may look like:
warning(
didWarnAboutDeprecation,
'The `SomeComponent` component has been deprecated and will be removed ' +
'in the next major release of `carbon-components-react`. Please use the ' +
'`SomeOtherComponent` component instead'
);
warning(
didWarnAboutDeprecation,
'The `SomeComponent` component has been deprecated and will be removed ' +
'in the next major release of `carbon-components-react`. Please visit ' +
'ibm.biz/<some-hash> for more information'
);
We offer ad-hoc backwards-support for older version of the system. This work is primarly driven by external contributors who may still need these older versions for legacy code. When updates are received and merged into the codebase, the release process will be a bit different than the one described above.
For example, with
carbon-components-react
we have specific branches for older major versions like v5
or v6
. If we
wanted to publish an update to either of these major versions, this process
would look like:
- Checkout the branch locally, making sure to pull in the latest from upstream
- Manually update
package.json
with the new version to publish in a branch calledchore/release-vX.Y.Z
and a commit message:chore(release): vX.Y.Z
- Create a Pull Request with this new branch and commit message
- Once this is merged into the branch, checkout locally and pull latest. Now we
can publish by running
npm publish .
, if you want to do a dry run first you can donpm publish . --dry-run
. This is helpful when dependencies may be different than in newer versions of the system
One important thing to verify is that package.json
has a publishConfig
field
that looks like the following:
{
"publishConfig": {
"tag": "<VERSION>.x"
}
}
For example, carbon-components-react
v5 would look like:
{
"publishConfig": {
"tag": "5.x"
}
}
This tag verifies that when we publish we do not publish to the latest
tag but
instead to the major-specific tag for the package.
After running npm publish .
and seeing the package publish to the registry,
you could create a git tag by running:
git tag -a vX.Y.Z # The commit message should match vX.Y.Z
You should then push this tag to the project by running:
git push upstream vX.Y.Z
This helps keep track of what versions have been published and snapshotting the code at that point in time.
When installing a dependency, you can run yarn add <dependency-name>
as
normal. The only difference now is that you also will check in the corresponding
tarball entry in .yarn/offline-mirror
as well so that we don't have to fetch
this dependency from the live registry during Continuous Integration builds.
Most likely this is due to Yarn mistakenly removing, or forgetting to add, a dependency to our offline mirror. Typically, running the following set of commands should reset the project back to a valid state and should bring back any missing dependencies or fetch new ones.
yarn clean
yarn cache clean
yarn
The first things Lerna will do are create a git tag and update package.json
versions. If you cancel before any packages publish, then you can do the
following:
# Delete the specific tag, usually something like v0.1.0
git tag -d name-of-tag
# Undo the last commit
git reset HEAD~
# Remove all staged files
git checkout -- .
You should be good to go after this!