0.0.8 • Published 3 years ago

@atlas-ui/react v0.0.8

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
-
Last release
3 years ago

@atlas-ui/react

A UI components library made in React

Note on my approach for this assignment: As it was said in the assignment to create a reusble select component, I chose do it the scalable way. That means this repository not only can be used to build a Select but other essential components too. It has a workflow for previewing, publishing, testing and development. So because of this this project might seem an overkill for this assignment. But I tried to show off some of my skills and experience from building consistent, accessible, reusable and robust UI component libraries and interfaces.

Tech Stack

Theming

There're two themes that you can use. Light and Dark. By default, the Light theme is active. The Dark theme is exported from the core package.

Learn more about how you can programmatically use themes in Stitches.

To see a theme in action go to Storybook and change the theme as shown below:

theme changer

Chromatic preview

To make it convinient for reviewers, we deploy the branch to chromatic and put the link to the preview storybook in the pr thread. See the example PR.

Install

Install via yarn or npm:

yarn add @atlas-ui/react

Usage

import { AtlasSelect } from '@atlas-ui/react'

<AtlasSelect options={[...]} />

Run

Start storybook

yarn start

Bundle with watch mode (useful when the package is linked)

yarn dev

Publish

We use release-it to manage versioning and publishing. Before publishing make sure that GITHUB_TOKEN environment variable is avaiable and contains your GitHub personal token. This is needed for GitHub releases.

Then run:

yarn release

Commit format

Using angular conventional-commits is highly recommended.

Commit Message Header

<type>(<scope>): <short summary>
  │       │             │
  │       │             └─⫸ Summary in present tense. Not capitalized. No period at the end.
  │       │
  │       └─⫸ Commit Scope
  │
  └─⫸ Commit Type: build|ci|docs|feat|fix|perf|refactor|test

The <type> and <summary> fields are mandatory, the (<scope>) field is optional.

Type

Must be one of the following:

  • build: Changes that affect the build system or external dependencies (example scopes: gulp, broccoli, npm)
  • ci: Changes to our CI configuration files and scripts (example scopes: Circle, BrowserStack, SauceLabs)
  • 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
  • test: Adding missing tests or correcting existing tests

Scope

The scope should be the name of the package affected (as perceived by the person reading the changelog generated from commit messages).

Folder structure and naming guidelines

atlas-ui
│   README.md
│
└──packages
    │
    └──component-name
        │
        └──ComponentName.tsx          // Contains the main logic
        └──ComponentName.styled.tsx   // Contains the styled components
        └──ComponentName.stories.tsx  // Contains Storybook stories
        └──ComponentName.test.tsx     // Contains all the test cases for this Component
        └──ComponentName.util.tsx     // Contains helper functions
        └──ComponentName.types.tsx    // Contains Typescript Interface and Types
        └──index.ts                   // Exports all public APIs and components
0.0.8

3 years ago

0.0.7

3 years ago

0.0.6

3 years ago

0.0.5

3 years ago

0.0.4

3 years ago

0.0.3

3 years ago

0.0.2

3 years ago