This library will help you in theming your favorite UI framework to look like the official DSFR as much as possible (https://github.com/GouvernementFR/dsfr). Our Storybook expands on how to integrate this library but also why using main UI frameworks can help. Also, it shows a real preview of each framework components themed:
🎨 https://dsfr-connect.rame.fr
This monorepository is managed with pnpm
, have it installed and run:
pnpm install
Then you can launch all framework Storybooks with:
cd apps/docs
pnpm cli prepare
pnpm cli dev
(if you want to launch just the raw DSFR and a specific framework you can use pnpm cli dev -f bootstrap-v5
)
Since technically we were required to have each framework version in a separate NPM package (and so a separate Storybook), we have developed the apps/docs/scripts/cli.ts
script to manage all actions at once easily.
Try to mimic what's already done for the frameworks in place, roughly the logic is the same for all:
- download the framework documentation (see
apps/docs/scripts/*/
to reuse some logic) - extract all code sections
- transform them to stories thanks to templating
- provide the theme through files like:
.scss
and.css
if the framework styling is done this way (the.css
version will help people who have websites like Wordpress or so, when they cannot use preprocessing).ts
for theme getters for framework to be styled through JavaScript.json
that should be a raw result of the.ts
getters so people in other languages (Python...) would be able to parse it easily
They must be shipped into the final bundle so people can easily use a service like https://www.unpkg.com/ to access files as a CDN without much burden.
Note: if your framework has a dark mode version, don't forget to theme it! Note that our Storybooks has an addon to switch the dark mode.
Post an issue or contact us through the livechat module on our Storybook.
- CodeCov: code coverage reports (we have CodeQL in addition in the CI/CD... pick just one in the future)
You must configure 2 environments in the CI/CD settings:
global
(to restrict todev
andmain
branches only)dev
(to restrict todev
branch only)prod
(to restrict tomain
branch only)
The following ones must be repository secrets (not environment ones):
NPM_TOKEN
: [SECRET]NETLIFY_AUTH_TOKEN
: [SECRET]NETLIFY_SITE_ID
: [SECRET]CRISP_WEBSITE_ID
: [SECRET]
The default branch is dev
.
-
Pattern:
main
Checked:- Require status checks to pass before merging
- Do not allow bypassing the above settings
-
Pattern:
dev
Checked:- Require linear history
- Do not allow bypassing the above settings
- Allow force pushes (+ "Specify who can force push" and leave for administrators)
We managed to have all Storybooks static in the same folder and we chose Netlify to host it. Just configure the 2 environments variables you can find from the Netlify interface and you're good to go!
Note: you can add a custom domain easily
Crisp is used as a livechat to facilitate communication with people not used to GitHub issues.
From their interface we create a website named: dsfr-connect
Then upload as the icon the one used for the DSFR website (usually apple-touch-icon.png
has enough quality).
Into the Chatbox & Email settings
section go to Chat Appearance
and set:
- Color theme (chatbot color):
Red
- Chatbox background (message texture):
Default (No background)
Then go to Chatbox Security
and enable Lock the chatbox to website domain (and subdomains)
(not need to enable it inside the development environment).
Since the most used IDE as of today is Visual Studio Code we decided to go we it. Using it as well will make you benefit from all the settings we set for this project.
Every settings should work directly when opening the project with vscode
, except for TypeScript.
Even if your project uses a TypeScript program located inside your node_modules
, the IDE generally uses its own. Which may imply differences since it's not the same version. We do recommend using the exact same, for this it's simple:
- Open a project TypeScript file
- Open the IDE command input
- Type
TypeScript
and click on the itemTypeScript: Select TypeScript Version...
- Then select
Use Workspace Version
In addition, using the workspace TypeScript will load compilerOptions.plugins
specified in your tsconfig.json
files, which is not the case otherwise. Those plugins will bring more confort while developing!