cc-global-components
Vue.js components for consistent navigation and branding across Creative Commons web properties
Status
Development: This project is currently in development.
Overview
This project is built using vue-sfc-rollup
which is is a CLI templating utility that scaffolds a minimal setup for compiling a Vue library - into a form ready to share via npm or via CDN.
The folder structure is as follows:
build/
: This has the rollup config for compiling files.dev/
: Use for serving the components for local testing during development.src
: This directory contains a sub-directory:
components
: This is where our components code is found. For this project, we have three components:
cc-explore.vue
: The component for the Explore CC banner.cc-global-header.vue
: The component for the Global Navigation Menuscc-global-footer.vue
: The component for the Global CC footer.index.js
: Where our components are exported. Any new component must be registered in this file.
Components
CC Explore
CC Explore requires a donation-url
attribute which is the URL used for the Donation button and a logo-url
attribute which is the location of the logo for the CC Web property this component is used on.
<cc-explore
donation-url="http://example.com"
logo-url="/example/logo-white.png"
/>
The CC Global Header has three required attributes, base-url
, donation-url
and logo-url
, which are the URLs used for the API call, Donation button and Logo respectively. There is one additional attribute useMenuPlaceholders
you can set which renders placeholder Menu Items if you are in a development environment. However, if you have WordPress setup correctly and you want to test this component with real Nav Menu items, you should not pass the useMenuPlaceholders
attribute. For a development environment, an example of a base-url
is http://127.0.0.1:8000
.
<cc-global-header
base-url="http://127.0.0.1:8000"
donation-url="http:/example.com"
use-menu-placeholders
logo-url="/example/logo-black.png"
/>
CC Global Footer requires a donation-url
attribute which is the URL used for the Donation button and a logo-url
attribute which is the location of the logo for the CC Web property this component is used on.
<cc-global-footer
donation-url="http://example.com"
logo-url="/example/logo-white.png"
/>
Mixed Content Issues for the logo-url
attribute
Mixed content occurs when initial HTML is loaded over a secure HTTPS connection, but other resources (such as images) are loaded over an insecure HTTP connection. Most modern browsers don't display pages with mixed content correctly so it is worth noting that the URL entered into the logo-url
attribute be appropriately served over HTTPS.
Usage
Integrate the CC Global Components into downstream projects with the following steps.
- Add Vue JS via CDN
- Add the stylesheets for Fonts and Vocabulary
- Include the CC Global Components from CDN
- Create a parent
div
element with class container
so as to add a default left and right padding to the components. The CC-Global-Footer can be excluded from this parent element since it's required to have a full width. - Add the desired component(s) to your template within a container
div
- Render the components in the template via JavaScript
Example for the cc-explore
component:
<link
rel="stylesheet"
href="https://unpkg.com/@creativecommons/vocabulary-fonts@0.x.x/dist/css/fonts.css"
/>
<link
rel="stylesheet"
href="https://unpkg.com/@creativecommons/vocabulary-styles@0.x.x/dist/css/vocabulary-styles.css"
/>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/vue@next"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/@creativecommons/cc-global-components@0.x.x/dist/cc-globals.min.js"></script>
<div class="container">
<div id="explore-cc">
<cc-explore
donation-url="http://example.com"
logo-url="/example/logo-white.png"
/>
</div>
</div>
<script>
const cc_explore = Vue.createApp({});
cc_explore.use(CcGlobal);
cc_explore.mount("#explore-cc");
</script>
For the cc-global-header
component, you will need to add Axios via CDN:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/axios/dist/axios.min.js"></script>
Development
See our contributing guide.
License