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untitled-ui's Introduction

untitled-ui

Usage

UI components are used the same way that you would normally use a component.

{{#ui-button}}
  Press me
{{/ui-button}}

Kinds

The presentational "kind" component to be used can be specified by providing a value for the kind property of a component:

{{#ui-button kind="primary"}}
  Press me
{{/ui-button}}

Sizes

The size of a component can be specified by providing a value for the size property of the component:

{{#ui-button size="small"}}
  Press me
{{/ui-button}}

The size of the component will determine things like font size and spacing.

Available sizes:

  • x-small
  • small
  • medium (default)
  • large
  • x-large

Classes

The class property can be used to set classes on the presentational component:

{{#ui-button class="myspecialbutton"}}
  Press me
{{/ui-button}}

Any classes that you set will be prefixed with the name of the component, so the class in the previous example will end up as ui-button--default--myspecialbutton.

Block Components

Some components are meant to be used in block form. These components will use the component helper to yield their presentational component as a block parameter. The yielded component will expose its API, usually consisting of components and/or actions:

For example, the ui-panel yields additional titlebar and content components:

{{#ui-panel as |p|}}
  {{#p.titlebar}}
    Some Title
  {{/p.titlebar}}

  {{#p.content}}
    Some content for the panel.
  {{/p.content}}
{{/ui-panel}}

Overview

Behavioral Components

One of the goals of untitled-ui is to provide a set of reusable components for bits of UI that are common across most apps. These components will provide a public API that defines their functionality. This functionality is provided by a component that extends the base ui-component component.

An example of a behavioral component is the ui-button component:

{{#ui-button}}
  Press me
{{/ui-button}}

Behavioral components delegate their presentation to another component, which we refer to as a "kind" component. The public API of the behavioral component will be exposed as properties passed to the presentational component.

Presentational Components

If a specific "kind" is not specified when the behavioral component is invoked, the default "kind" for that UI component will be used.

In the previous example, we invoked the ui-button component without specifying a kind, which is the same as specifying the "default" kind:

{{#ui-button kind="default"}}
  Press me
{{/ui-button}}

This will result in the ui-button--default kind component being used for presenting the ui-button. The public API of the behavioral component will be exposed as properties passed to the kind component.

A behavioral component, such as a ui-button, is likely to have multiple different ways of being presented throughout an app. For example, an application might have "default", "primary", and "secondary" kinds of buttons.

The kind can be specified when the component is invoked:

{{#ui-button kind="primary"}}
  Press me
{{/ui-button}}

This will use the same behavioral ui-button component but will delegate its presentation to the ui-button--primary kind component.

A very simple example of what this delegation looks like can be seen in the following example:

{{! addon/templates/components/ui-example.hbs}}

{{#component frame as |component|}}
  {{yield component}}
{{/component}}

The value for frame is determined by the name of the component and the value of kind. For example, if the kind is "default", the value of frame would be "ui-example--default".

Component Styles

CSS styles for UI Components are written using SASS and a special @component syntax, similar to defining a SASS mixin.

For example, the styles for the "default" kind of a ui-example component could be written as follows:

// addon/styles/components/ui-example--default.scss

@component($background: red) {
  background: $background;
}

Defining a component's styles with the @component syntax will create both a SASS mixin and a class that includes that mixin automatically based on the name of the file.

For example, the SASS output from the previous example is as follows:

@mixin ui-example--default($background: red) {
  background: $background;
}

.ui-example--default {
  @include ui-example--default();
}

The naming conventions here are important because the resulting class matches the class that is automatically applied to the component with the same name.

Creating all of our styles via mixins is important for creating additional kinds as well as theming because it allows us to define an API for customizing a component's styles without relying on the CSS cascade.

For example, if we wanted to create the "happy" kind of our ui-example component, we can use the mixin provided by the "default" kind:

// addon/styles/components/ui-example--happy.scss

@import "./ui-example--default";

@component($background: green) {
  @include ui-example--default($background: $background);
}

The resulting mixins act like functions and allow for composability without relying on the CSS cascade. When the "happy" kind of ui-example component is rendered, it will only have the .ui-example--happy class rather than the traditional method of composing CSS styles by applying additional modifier classes that rely on specificity.

Build Tools

Autoprefixing

Any classes written in the template of a kind component will be automatically prefixed with the name of the component.

For example:

// addon/templates/styles/components/ui-example--default.hbs

<div class=":component foo">
  <div class="bar">
  </div>
</div>

Would result in the following:

<div class="ui-example--default ui-example--default--foo">
  <div class="ui-example-default--bar">
  </div>
</div>

Themes

Overview

untitled-ui components are defined and/or customized via themes.

Themes are used to provide a customized set of kind components. Themes allow their author the ability to customize both the CSS and the presentational markup of UI components.

For example, the ui-button component provided by ui-base-theme has both "default" and "primary" kinds. A theme author can customize the presentation for "default" and "primary" kinds for their theme.

ui-base-theme

ui-base-theme is the base theme that other themes will build on top of. It contains the default set of components along with very basic styling. The base theme is not intended to be used by itself but is a starting point. The goal is for consumers to start by installing a theme, which is built on top of ui-base-theme.

SASS

The easiest way to theme a component is by creating a SASS stylesheet that follows the component naming scheme.

For example, if you wanted to create your theme's version of the "default" kind of the ui-example component, you would create the following stylesheet:

// addon/stylesheets/components/ui-example--default.scss

@import "./ui-example--default";

@component($background: green) {
  @include ui-example--default($background: $background);
}

Note: Just creating this stylesheet is enough for the build tools to generate the app and addon components with the same name for you.

Templates

You can also customize the template for components when creating a theme.

For example, if your theme wanted to change the template for the ui-example--default kind component, you could create the following:

// addon/templates/components/ui-example--default.hbs

<div class=":component {{classes.class}} {{classes.size}}">
  <p>This is some dummy content.</p>
  <p>This whole template is special for my theme.</p>
</div>

Addons Overview

Brief descriptions of the responsibilities of the different addons.

untitled-ui is a collection of build tools that are used by the other addons. Some of its responsibilities are autoprefixing CSS classes and autogenerating component files.

ui-base-theme is the base theme that all other themes will build on top of. It includes the base set of behavioral components and presentational kind components along with minimal styling.

ui-tomato-theme is an example theme being created to test out theming. This theme is being used in the ui-testapp.

ui-testapp is an example of an app that consumes a theme. The theme that it uses is the ui-tomato-theme.

Debugging

untitled-ui uses debug to optionally log helpful messages during the build.

# to log all messages
$ DEBUG=untitled-ui:* ember s

# to log specific module messages
$ DEBUG=untitled-ui:resolver ember s

untitled-ui's People

Contributors

jacojoubert avatar ebryn avatar heroiceric avatar ianstarz avatar johno avatar dipiep avatar ember-tomster avatar machty avatar

Watchers

Ilya Radchenko avatar James Cloos avatar  avatar

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