title | type | order |
---|---|---|
Contributing |
docs |
4 |
First clone and install the project:
git clone [email protected]:transloadit/uppy.git
cd uppy
npm install
Our website's examples section is also our playground, read "Website Development"'s "Local Previews" section to get up and running.
We keep the uppy.io website in ./website
for so it's easy to keep docs & code in sync as we're still iterating at high velocity. For those reading this screaming murder, HashiCorp does this for all their projects, and it's working well for them on a scale vastly more impressive than Uppy's.
The site is built with Hexo, and Travis automatically deploys this onto GitHub Pages (it overwrites the gh-pages
branch with Hexo's build at every change to master
). The content is written in Markdown and located in ./website/src
. Feel free to fork & hack!
Even though bundled in this repo, the website is regarded as a separate project. So it has its own package.json
and we aim keep the surface where the two projects interface as small as possible. ./website/update.js
is called during website builds to inject the Uppy knowledge into the site.
It's recommended to exclude ./website/public/
from your editor if you want efficient searches.
To install the required node modules, type:
npm install && cd website && npm install && cd ..
For local previews on http://127.0.0.1:4000 type:
npm start
This will watch the website, as well as Uppy, as the examples, and rebuild everything and refresh your browser as files change.
Then, to work on e.g. the Multipart example, you'd edit the following files:
atom src/core/Core.js \
src/plugins/Multipart.js \
src/plugins/Formtag.js \
src/plugins/Plugin.js \
website/src/examples/multipart/app.es6
And open http://0.0.0.0:4000/examples/multipart/index.html in your webbrowser.
Unit tests can be run with:
npm run test:unit
For acceptance (or end to end) tests, we use Webdriverio. For it to run locally, you need to install selenium standalone server, just follow the guide to do so.
After you’ve installed and launched the selenium standalone server, run:
npm run test:acceptance:local
The CSS standards followed in this project closely resemble those from Medium's CSS Guidelines. If it's not mentioned here, follow their guidelines.
This project uses naming conventions adopted from the SUIT CSS framework. Read about them here.
To quickly summarize:
Syntax: u-[sm-|md-|lg-]
.u-utilityName
.u-floatLeft
.u-lg-col6
Syntax: [-][-descendentName][--modifierName]
.twt-Button /* Namespaced component */
.MyComponent /* Components pascal cased */
.Button--default /* Modified button style */
.Button--large
.Tweet
.Tweet-header /* Descendents */
.Tweet-bodyText
.Accordion.is-collapsed /* State of component */
.Accordion.is-expanded
This project uses SASS, with some limitations on nesting. One-level deep nesting is allowed, but nesting may not extend a selector by using the &
operator. For example:
/* BAD */
.Button {
&--disabled {
...
}
}
/* GOOD */
.Button {
...
}
.Button--disabled {
...
}
Style to the mobile breakpoint with your selectors, then use min-width
media queries to add any styles to the tablet or desktop breakpoints.
- All selectors are sorted alphabetically and by type.
- HTML elements go above classes and IDs in a file.
- Rules are sorted alphabetically.
/* BAD */
.wrapper {
width: 940px;
margin: auto;
}
h1 {
color: red;
}
.article {
width: 100%;
padding: 32px;
}
/* GOOD */
h1 {
color: red;
}
.article {
padding: 32px;
width: 100%;
}
.wrapper {
margin: auto;
width: 940px;
}