First off, thanks for taking the time to contribute!
The following is a set of guidelines for contributing to react-md
and its
packages. These are mostly guidelines, not rules. Use your best judgment, and
feel free to propose changes to this document in a pull request.
If you have a question about how to use react-md
, getting started, or general
styling questions, please do not create an issue. Instead, join the official
Slack channel where someone will hopefully answer your question for you.
You will need an invite to join the official Slack channel, but luckily you can get an invite by entering your email into the automated invite site: https://react-md.herokuapp.com
Note: this invite site is running on a heroku free tier plan, so if you try to get an invite near the end of the month, this site might be down. If you need to join immediately, you can send an email to mlaursen03@gmail.com with a subject of "react-md Slack invite". You can also use this email template.
If you found a bug, first search the existing issues to see if it has already been reported. If the bug has not been reported, create an issue on GitHub using the bug report template and provide as much information as possible. Attaching screenshots as well as a runnable code example using codesandbox will help get a bugfix out quicker due to less debugging and initial setup.
When creating the issue name, please be concise and focus on a specific package, version, or browser that this occurs in. Here is a list of good bug issue titles:
ComponentName
in @react-md/package
is not accessibleIf you would like to see a new feature within react-md
, please open an issue
on GitHub using the feature request template. To help the contributors
prioritize a feature, please provide as much information as possible any helpful
screenshots, or a link to a page on the material design website.
Since this project is really maintained by only one developer, the scope of allowed features will be limited to:
Before you start working on a bug or feature, please make sure that there has already been an issue filed and the fix/feature has been approved as a valid bug or feature. From there, you'll want to follow the steps below which will outline initial setup and other information.
If you just want to get quickly started and run the documentation server, you can run the following commands:
yarn
yarn setup
yarn dev
This will install all the packages, run the build for the first time, and start up the development server in watch mode.
If this is your first time contributing, I really recommend reading the next few points for more information before getting started.
To get started, you'll first want to fork the react-md repo and then clone
your forked repository locally. Once the project has been cloned, you'll want to
install the dependencies and get an initial build rolling. react-md
is
developed as a monorepo using yarn and lerna and might not work with npm
,
so you will want to install yarn
first. Once yarn is installed, you can also
optionally install lerna
globally or use npx for all lerna
commands.
Installing lerna
is optional since the base npm scripts will cover most of
the cases for you and use the locally installed lerna
by default.
npx
is available withnpm@5.2
or greater
Now that yarn
(and optionally lerna
) have been installed, you can install
and bootstrap all the packages using yarn
or yarn install
.
Next, you'll need to build the dev-utils
package to be able to build each
project and have some helpful utils available while developing react-md
:
yarn build-dev-utils
yarn --force
Note the
yarn --force
. This is unfortunately required since thedev-utils
package creates an executable and for some reasonyarn
can't symlink it correctly if you ran install before this executable existed. Runningyarn --force
after thedev-utils
package is built allows for it to be available in all the other packages.
Now that the dev-utils
have been installed and are ready to use, it's time to
run your first build. Unfortunately, this will take a bit of time the first time
it is run (~5-10 min). Start the build with:
yarn build
Whew! We're getting there. Now that you have your initial build, you can start developing and start up the documentation server! You can start the server with:
yarn start
Or
yarn dev
Using yarn start
will only start up the documentation server while yarn dev
will also start up the yarn watch
command which will automatically update any
scss variables that have been changed and create a Typescript watcher for the
react-md
packages.
The documentation server is built using nextjs to provide server side
rendering and runs using a custom typescript server. The app will be available
at http://localhost:3000 by default, but you can configure the port by setting
the PORT
environment variable:
PORT=8080 yarn start
The documentation folder will contain the following folders:
public
- Static files to be served. This shouldn't really include many other
files as most of the time the static files should be imported normally with
webpack.src/components
- All the React components to be used throughout the app.
This is 95% of the codebasesrc/constants
- Any general constants to use throughout the app and demos.
This is where reusable data should be storedsrc/guides
- A list of all the *.md
files that should be used as guidessrc/hooks
- Any reusable hooks for the documentation site onlysrc/icons
- Any custom icons that are not available from Material Iconssrc/pages
- All the pages in the site. Check out the next block for more
informationsrc/server
- The custom typescript serversrc/types
- Any custom types needed to run the appsrc/utils
- General utils used for the documentation site. This include
things like a simple number generator or some string utilsIf you haven't used nextjs
before, the way it works is that every file found
in the src/pages
directory will be turned into a route in the website. So if
we want to have the /customization
and /customization/color-palette
routes,
you'll have a file structure of:
src/pages/customization/index.tsx
src/pages/customization/color-palette.tsx
Since this can lead to some pages accidentally being created, components aren't
actually created in this directory and instead are found within the base
src/components
folder. All the files within the src/pages
folder will just
be a simple pointer to a file in the src/components
folder. A really good
example for this is how the About page is created. All that exists at
src/pages/about.ts
is a single line:
export { default } from "components/About";
This will be where all the package demos are stored and where 90% of the
contributions and development will be. You'll find a all the packages within
react-md
in this directory with PascalCase
. Each of these folders will
contain:
index.tsx
DemoName.tsx
DemoName.md
The main index.tsx
file will include all the demos within the app and just
render a DemoPage
component. Each demo will at least need:
children
Where the description should be the DemoName.md
file, the children should be
the DemoName.tsx
, and the name should be the Demo Name
.
It'll probably be the most helpful to just check out the Demo source code as well as an example demo file to get a more in-depth example.
If your demo requires more than one additional file, you should create a directory for all the demo files including the main readme.
├── CustomRenderers
│ ├── CustomRenderers.tsx
│ ├── NonVirtualizedMenu.tsx
│ ├── README.md
│ ├── VirtualizedMenu.tsx
│ └── index.ts
Tests are being run with jest and using the react-testing-library to test React components.
You can run tests at the root level to test all packages:
yarn test
The test command also supports the --watch
flag so you can continually run
tests while developing.
TODO:
The Typescript and JavaScript files found within this repo will be linted with eslint while the SCSS files are handled by sass-lint. If your IDE or text editor supports these linters, errors should be caught in real-time while editing files. Otherwise, you can manually trigger the lint command with:
yarn lint
## or for typescript only
yarn lint-ts
## or for scss only
yarn lint-styles
This project is currently formatted using prettier, so it is recommended to add support in your IDE to automatically format as needed. Otherwise, all files will automatically be formatted pre-commit.
This repository uses conventional commits with the angular preset. When
committing, either use commitizen with git cz
or yarn cz
which will help
you create a correct git commit message.
The most important scripts while developing and contributing to react-md will be
the start
, test
, and watch
commands. Running yarn start
will start up
the documentation server using nextjs and the watch
command will dynamically
start up tsc
watchers for each package when a file change is detected as well
as re-distributing any changed scss files. If you want to see any additional
useful dev utils and scripts, run:
yarn dev-utils --help