patternslib v2.1.1
Patterns
Patterns is a toolkit that enables designers to build rich interactive prototypes without the need for writing any JavaScript. All events are triggered by classes and other attributes in the HTML, without abusing the HTML as a programming language. Accessibility, SEO and well structured HTML are core values of Patterns.
Browser support
Patterns aims to support at least the two latest major versions of all popular browsers.
Currently that means:
- Apple Safari 5+
- Google Chrome 30+
- Microsoft Internet Explorer 9+
Other browser version may work too, but are not actively tested against.
Installation requirements
Make sure, you have these requirements installed:
- Node.js ( https://nodejs.org/en/ )
- yarn ( https://yarnpkg.com/ )
Installation
The following commands will generate a bundle.js
file in the dist
directory
which contains Patterns and all its dependencies:
git clone git://github.com/Patternslib/Patterns.git
cd Patterns
make
Alternatively, you can download a bundle at patternslib.com.
Overriding the path where JavaScript and other assets are loaded
The bundle itself is included via a <script>
tag.
But the bundle loads also other assets dynamically - most importantly other JavaScript files from a webpack-built directory called chunks
.
By default the path where these files are loaded is the absolute path /dist/
.
You might want to override this path for your application.
There are two ways to do this:
1) Similar to src/patterns.js
you can import on top of all other imports another file like src/public_path.js
and define the public path for webpack like so:
__webpack_public_path__ = "/my-other-dist-directory";
2) You can dynamically set the public path from your web framework and include a <script>
tag in your header BEFORE you load the bundle like so:
<script>window.__patternslib_public_path__ = "/my-other-dist-directory/";</script>
Using polyfills
For Internet Explorer support we have included a src/polyfills.js
module.
You can inlcude it optionally via src/polyfills-loader.js
which injects the polyfills bundle only if the current browser is Internet Explorer.
For this to work, include the following in BEFORE you load the patternslib bundle:
<script src="/your-dist-directory/polyfills-loader.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
Note: this only works, if the bundle nor the polyfills-loader are not loaded asynchronously. The script loading order matters here and async loading has no deterministic loading order.
Layout
The individual patterns are located in their own folders in ./src/pat/
.
Each pattern folder contains some or all of the following files:
- index.html which contains HTML markup that shows a demonstration of the pattern.
- documentation.md which is a Markdown file that documents the pattern's purpose, how to use it and how to configure it.
- A javascript file which implements the pattern's functionality.
- A Sass (.scss) file which provides the CSS associated with the pattern.
To generate CSS files from the pattern's included Sass files, type make all_css
and the css files will be generated in the same location as the Sass files.
You'll need to have a Sass compiler installed.
How to demo patterns
To demo the patterns, simply type make serve
to install the necessary
dependencies and to start a simple Node.js HTTP server.
You can then visit http://localhost:4001 to see a site with demos.
Alternatively, patterns can also be demoed through the Patternslib.com website, which is open-source. The code and setup instructions are here.
Contributing fixes
To develop on Patterns, clone the repository and set it's push-url to your fork:
git remote set-url --push origin <url_to_your_fork>
Create a branch for the feature/bug you are working on:
git checkout -b <feature>
For inclusion use either a GitHub pull request or create a ticket with a url to your external repository.
Running tests
The simplest way to run the tests are to use make:
make check
This will install all required npm and bower packages and run the tests.
Debugging tests
Eventually add to tests:
import "core-js/stable";
import "regenerator-runtime/runtime";
Then:
node --inspect-brk node_modules/.bin/jest --runInBand ./src/pat/tooltip/tooltip.test.js
Connect in chrome via:
chrome://inspect
You can pass Jest any parameter it accepts, like -t TESTPATTERN
::
node --inspect-brk node_modules/.bin/jest --runInBand ./src/pat/tooltip/tooltip.test.js -t will.be.closed.when
Bundle build analyzation
https://survivejs.com/webpack/optimizing/build-analysis/ https://formidable.com/blog/2018/finding-webpack-duplicates-with-inspectpack-plugin/
Build the stats.json file:
yarn build:stats
Check dependency tree and why which package was included: https://www.npmjs.com/package/whybundled
whybundled stats.json
Visualize dependency tree and analyze bundle size: https://www.npmjs.com/package/webpack-bundle-analyzer
webpack-bundle-analyzer stats.json
Organisations and projects which use Patternslib
- Overstroom ik?, a website which informs Dutch citizens of their risk of flooding. It was introduced and highly praised by the Dutch minister of infrastructure and environment, Melanie Schultz.
- OiRA, an online risk assessment tool, created for the Occupational Health and Safety Agency (OSHA) of the European Union.
- Staralliance uses Patternslib in their intranet.
- Plone CMS and Plone Intranet project both use Patternslib.
Interactive HTML/CSS prototypes made with Patternslib
- The Plone Intranet prototype
- The Patternslib.com website uses Patternslib and is based upon a prototype, which can be found here.