kibana/packages/kbn-ui-framework
Thomas Neirynck 9e79f891fb
[Maps] add attribution for EMS sources / design improvements (#28310) (#28706)
- Add attribution from EMS sources to map.
- Design improvements in layout of lon/lat readout and attribution
2019-01-14 15:08:44 -05:00
..
components Backport/19383/6.x (#19487) 2018-05-28 20:24:23 -07:00
dist [Maps] add attribution for EMS sources / design improvements (#28310) (#28706) 2019-01-14 15:08:44 -05:00
doc_site [6.x] EUI 5.8.1 comes with a brand color refresh. Also removes lots of KUI (#27009) (#27429) 2018-12-18 14:32:08 -08:00
generator-kui Backport/19383/6.x (#19487) 2018-05-28 20:24:23 -07:00
src Final ui/public/styles LESS to SASS (#27510) (#28696) 2019-01-14 13:53:10 -05:00
Gruntfile.js Backport/19383/6.x (#19487) 2018-05-28 20:24:23 -07:00
package.json [6.x] Upgrade to NodeJS 10 (#25157) (#26909) 2018-12-10 18:50:30 +00:00
README.md [@kbn/ui-framework] move ui-framework to a package (#17085) (#17128) 2018-03-13 12:54:05 -07:00

Kibana UI Framework

The Kibana UI Framework is a collection of React UI components for quickly building user interfaces for Kibana. Not using React? No problem! You can still use the CSS behind each component.

Using the Framework

Documentation

Compile the CSS with ./node_modules/grunt/bin/grunt uiFramework:compileCss (OS X) or .\node_modules\grunt\bin\grunt uiFramework:compileCss (Windows).

You can view interactive documentation by running yarn uiFramework:start and then visiting http://localhost:8020/. This will also start watching the SCSS files, and will recompile the CSS automatically for you when you make changes.

You can run node scripts/jest --watch to watch for changes and run the tests as you code.

You can run node scripts/jest --coverage to generate a code coverage report to see how fully-tested the code is.

See the documentation in scripts/jest.js for more options.

Creating components

There are four steps to creating a new component:

  1. Create the SCSS for the component in packages/kbn-ui-framework/src/components.
  2. Create the React portion of the component.
  3. Write tests.
  4. Document it with examples in packages/kbn-ui-framework/doc_site.

You can do this using Yeoman (the easy way), or you can do it manually (the hard way).

Using Yeoman

Create a new component

From the command line, run yarn uiFramework:createComponent.

First, you'll be prompted for what kind of component to create:

Choice Description
Stateless function A stateless functional React component
Component class A class-based React component

Next, you'll enter a series of prompts.

"What's the name of this component?"

Yeoman will ask you what to name the file. It expects you to provide the name in snake case. Yeoman will automatically add file extensions and a "kui" prefix so you should leave those out.

"Where do you want to create this component's files?"

This defaults to the last directory you specified for this prompt, or to the UI Framework's components directory if you haven't specified one. To change this location, type in the path to the directory where the files should live.

If you want Yeoman to automatically generate a directory to organize the files, that directory will be created inside of the location you specify (see next prompt).

"Does it need its own directory?""

This defaults to YES. This will automatically generate a directory with the same name as the file, but without a "kui" prefix.

Done!

Yeoman will generate the files you need in your project's folder system.

For your convenience, it will also output some snippets you can tweak to import and re-export the generated JS and SCSS files.

Manually

Create component SCSS

  1. Create a directory for your component in packages/kbn-ui-framework/src/components.
  2. In this directory, create _{component name}.scss.
  3. Optional: Create any other components that should be logically-grouped in this directory.
  4. Create an _index.scss file in this directory that import all of the new component SCSS files you created.
  5. Import the _index.scss file into packages/kbn-ui-framework/src/components/index.scss.

This makes your styles available to Kibana and the UI Framework documentation.

Create the React component

  1. Create the React component(s) in the same directory as the related SCSS file(s).
  2. Export these components from an index.js file.
  3. Re-export these components from packages/kbn-ui-framework/src/components/index.js.

This makes your React component available for import into Kibana.

Test the component

  1. Start Jest in watch mode by running node scripts/jest --watch.
  2. Create test files with the name pattern of {component name}.test.js.
  3. Write your tests and see them fail or succeed.

To see how well the components have been covered by tests, you can run node scripts/jest --coverage and check the generated report in target/jest-coverage/index.html.

Document the component with examples

  1. Create a directory for your example in packages/kbn-ui-framework/doc_site/src/views. Name it the name of the component.
  2. Create a {component name}_example.js file inside the directory. You'll use this file to define the different examples for your component.
  3. Add the route to this file in packages/kbn-ui-framework/doc_site/src/services/routes/Routes.js.
  4. In the {component name}_example.js file you created, define examples which demonstrate the component and describe its role from a UI perspective.

The complexity of the component should determine how many examples you need to create, and how complex they should be. In general, your examples should demonstrate:

  • The most common use-cases for the component.
  • How the component handles edge cases, e.g. overflowing content, text-based vs. element-based content.
  • The various states of the component, e.g. disabled, selected, empty of content, error state.

Creating documentation

You can use the same Yeoman generator referenced above to create documentation.

From the command line, run yarn uiFramework:documentComponent.

First, you'll be prompted for what kind of documentation to create:

Choice Description
Page A page for documenting a component(s) with multiple demos
Page demo An individual demo of a particular component use case
Sandbox An empty document where you can do pretty much anything

Just follow the prompts and your documentation files will be created. You can use the snippets that are printed to the terminal to integrate these files into the UI Framework documentation site.

Principles

Logically-grouped components

If a component has subcomponents (e.g. ToolBar and ToolBarSearch), tightly-coupled components (e.g. Button and ButtonGroup), or you just want to group some related components together (e.g. TextInput, TextArea, and CheckBox), then they belong in the same logical grouping. In this case, you can create additional SCSS files for these components in the same component directory.

Writing CSS

Check out our CSS style guide and SCSS style guide.

Benefits

Dynamic, interactive documentation

By having a "living style guide", we relieve our designers of the burden of creating and maintaining static style guides. This also makes it easier for our engineers to translate mockups, prototypes, and wireframes into products.

Copy-pasteable UI

Engineers can copy and paste sample code into their projects to quickly get reliable, consistent results.

Remove CSS from the day-to-day

The CSS portion of this framework means engineers don't need to spend mental cycles translating a design into CSS. These cycles can be spent on the things critical to the identity of the specific project they're working on, like architecture and business logic.

If they use the React components, engineers won't even need to see CSS -- it will be encapsulated behind the React components' interfaces.

More UI tests === fewer UI bugs

By covering our UI components with great unit tests and having those tests live within the framework itself, we can rest assured that our UI layer is tested and remove some of that burden from our integration/end-to-end tests.

Why not just use Bootstrap?

In short: we've outgrown it! Third-party CSS frameworks like Bootstrap and Foundation are designed for a general audience, so they offer things we don't need and don't offer things we do need. As a result, we've been forced to override their styles until the original framework is no longer recognizable. When the CSS reaches that point, it's time to take ownership over it and build your own framework.

We also gain the ability to fix some of the common issues with third-party CSS frameworks:

  • They have non-semantic markup.
  • They deeply nest their selectors.

For a more in-depth analysis of the problems with Bootstrap (and similar frameworks), check out this article and the links it has at the bottom: "Bootstrap Bankruptcy".

Examples of other in-house UI frameworks