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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Introduction
Contributing

Contributing to baseui

Getting started

To quickly launch a web page to start developing, run the commands below to install dependencies and launch the page.

git clone [email protected]:uber/baseweb.git
cd baseweb
yarn
yarn ladle serve

Testing

There are a variety of testing strategies included in the project. Unit tests and visual regression tests are the most common. Most bug fixes will begin with a failing test. You also may want to add a new page for prototyping; this is done by creating a new .scenario.js file within a component __tests__ directory. If you add a new file, also add that into the __tests__/component-name.stories.js file.

Unit tests

Unit test files are located in component directories (src/button/__tests__) and end with a .test.js extension. Create a new file or add to an existing one following jest and react-testing-library conventions.

# to run all unit tests:
yarn unit-test

# to run a specific unit test:
yarn unit-test src/button/__tests__/button.test.js

End-to-end tests

E2E test files end with a .e2e.js extension. These tests can launch a web page and interact with it using the puppeteer library. mount function calls within those tests reference the names of .scenario.js files. These tests require the baseui library to be compiled before running, so will involve a couple more steps than other testing strategies. If you make a change to library code, you will need to recompile before running e2e tests.

# in one shell build the library:
yarn e2e:build

# in a second shell serve the web pages:
yarn e2e:serve

# in a third shell run the integration tests:
yarn e2e:test src/button/__tests__/button.e2e.js

Visual regression tests

VRTs take screenshots of web pages and assert pixel-perfect accuracy between pull-requests. More detailed information can be found here. If you create a new .scenario.js file, the VRT job will take a screenshot of it. Be sure not to add any changing data here like timestamps.

Type checking

The main baseui code has type-checking with flow. Typescript type definitions are also included in component directories at src/button/index.d.ts. Our documentation site has examples in both flow and typescript. You'll want to type-check both.

yarn flow

yarn tsc

Linting

yarn lint

Documentation

The project documentation is built using next.js and is located in the documentation-site directory. To start the project, you will want to follow the instructions below.

yarn documentation:dev:watch

Contributions we won't accept

While we are extremely grateful for all the contributions we get, sometimes we have to say no to some pull requests.

Usually, we reject contributions if they meet any of the following requirements:

  • Introduces a utility function/component, that's not used by Base Web itself.
  • New components that were not approved before sending the pull request. To make sure you don't run into any issues landing your new component to the library, please open a GitHub issue first to discuss the new addition.
  • Slight alterations of existing components - like introducing a new component called "Fancy Button".
  • Breaking changes - if your changeset introduces API changes, please make sure to do them in a backward-compatible way.
  • The PR includes opinionated changes that are not necessary - examples for this include introducing destructuring or moving files around based on personal preference.
  • Most examples for the documentation site that shows integration with a third-party library or service - we welcome these guides as blogposts. If you are interested in contributing one, please open a GitHub issue with the proposal!

Definition of done

  • Each component has a drop-in, stateful, stateless, styled (presentation) components exported
    • When you add examples for the documentation site, try to prioritize stateless examples with hooks
  • Browser accessibility support and aria attributes
  • Styletron for CSS-in-JS styling
  • Unit tests with jest and react testing library
  • Flow type coverage for all relevant component code and tests
    • TypeScript coverage for the API
  • Documentation added to the docs site. You start the doc site using yarn documentation:dev:watch.

Git Commit Formatting

Commit messages should be formatted according to commitlint specifications. Doing so allows us to better document the baseweb changelog.

Sending Pull Requests

When send a pull request, please make sure that you have one of the following labels set:

  • breaking
  • feature
  • bugfix
  • docs
  • discussion
  • release
  • prerelease
  • greenkeeping

Environment Variables

We use a number of environment variables for our build process. Anything used by Buildkite should be stored with our secrets (ask a team member if you need access) and forwarded to the appropriate service in docker-compose.yml. Anything needed to build the documentation site should be added to Vercel.

For local development the only environment variables you may need to set up are for the documentation site's Figma based pages (/guidelines). If you are working on code for those pages you will want to create a .env file locally and populate FIGMA_AUTH_TOKEN as well as FIGMA_FILE_ID. You can then use yarn documentation:dev:watch:env to automatically load those variables in development.