Koine
a common ui component library
Overview
Koine is my personal component library, while it's small, it's designed to be extensible and
reusable across multiple application. This component lib is set up to use
styled-components,
polished, and
styled-components-modifiers π
.
Installation
This package is available on npm as koine
, and you can find it
here.
To install the latest stable version with yarn
:
$ yarn add koine
...or with npm
:
$ npm install koine
Up & Running
To install dependencies with Yarn, run:
$ yarn
or to install with npm, run:
$ npm install
File Structure
This component library borrows its structure from BEM and is set
up to use Blocks, Elements, and Modifiers. Below is a description of each.
Blocks
Blocks are the highest level of abstraction in the Blocks, Elements, Modifiers concept.
They are responsible for providing the context for Elements, handling UI logic, and rendering the
Elements within the Block. They are not connected to application state, nor do they handle any
business logic.
Elements
Elements are the smallest, indivisible parts of UI. They are responsible for actually rendering the
UI. They do not handle application logic or UI logic, but they do handle their own modifiers which
modify the elementβs style. Elements generally exist within the context of a Block (as their own
file in the Blockβs directory) allowing the reuse of that set of Elements, but they are not
exclusively bound to blocks. An example of a stand-alone Element would be an A, Link, H3, or P.
These common elements live in lib/elements
.
Modifiers
This library utilizes
styled-components-modifiers
to build
modifiers. Modifiers are small functions that allow us to alter the properties of an Element.
They primarily live in the Element's file and are solely responsible for modifying styles.
Some modifiers are common to multiple Elements. An example would be fontWeights
.
These common modifiers live in lib/modifiers
An Example Structure
β lib/
βββ blocks/
| βββ Card
| | βββ Body.js // <- Element
| | βββ Footer.js // <- Element
| | βββ Header.js // <- Element
| | βββ index.js // <- Block
| βββ index.js // <- export for all Blocks
βββ elements/
| βββ A
| | βββ __tests__
| | | βββ __snapshots__
| | | | βββ index.js.snap // <- Snapshot Test
| | | βββ index.js // <- Test
| | βββ index.js // <- Element
| βββ Link
| | βββ index.js // <- Element
| βββ H3
| | βββ index.js // <- Element
| βββ P
| | βββ index.js // <- Element
| βββ etc.
| βββ index.js // <- export for all Blocks
βββ modifiers/
| βββ fontWeights
| βββ etc.
βββ index.js // <- main export for the library
Local Development
Module Development Workflow
Helpful information on development workflow in this library lives
here.
Linting
NOTE: The linter will run against everything in the lib
directory.
JavaScript Linting
This assumes you have eslint and eslint-watch installed. If you don't, run the following:
$ npm i -g eslint eslint-watch
or if you need permissions:
$ sudo npm i -g eslint eslint-watch
To run the linter once:
$ yarn lint:js
To run the watch task:
$ yarn lint:js:watch
Style Linting
I've also added a style linter for Sass / SCSS.
To run the style linter:
$ yarn lint:style
Linting JavaScript & Styles
To run both linters:
$ yarn lint
Testing
An initial test suite has been setup with two tests (one passing and one intentionally failing).
We're using Jest Snapshots for our initial test setup, though Enzym and Expect are also available.
The basic test setup lives in ./__tests__
. The main configuration for Jest lives at the bottom
of package.json
. I've also added a few handy scripts, which I've listed below. Jest also gives
us a test coverage tool for free, so I've added that too. The setup is at the bottom of
package.json
. Everything is set to 90% coverage, but your welcome to update that to whatever
you'd like.
To run the tests once:
$ npm test
To run the watch script (for only relevant test files)
$ npm run test:watch
To run the watch script (for all test files)
$ npm run test:watchAll
To view the coverage report:
$ npm run test:coverage:report
Review
If you'd like to run the linters and tests at once (this is a nice check before pushing to
Github or deploys), you can run:
$ npm run review
Build
NOTE: When you run build
, Babel will create a build
directory. This is what your users
will interact with when they use your library. Nothing in lib
gets shipped with your
published module.
Run once:
$ npm run build
Run the watch script:
$ npm run build:watch
NOTE: the build script runs in the prepublish
script just before you publish to npm.
Contributing
I am thankful for any contributions made by the community. By contributing you agree to abide by
the Code of Conduct in the Contributing Guidelines.
License
MIT