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GitHub Actions build status on main <br/> GitHub Actions build status on spectrum-two

</div> <h1 align="center">Spectrum CSS</h1> <h3 align="center">A CSS-implementation of the Spectrum design language</h3> <img src="assets/spectrum-css_illustration_desktop.png">

Features

     <img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/Get%20started-F0F0F0?style=for-the-badge&logo=adobe&logoColor=%23FF0000"/>   <img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/Storybook-F0F0F0?style=for-the-badge&logo=storybook&logoColor=%23FF4785"/>

Using Spectrum CSS

The preferred method of using Spectrum CSS relies on custom properties to swap out variables for different themes and contexts. This results in the lowest bundle sizes and is one of the simpler approaches.

Want to get a component up and running as soon as possible? Check out the quick start guide.

Functionality

Spectrum CSS is CSS-only, implementing only the interactivity that can be done with pure CSS. We do include some lightweight JS-based interaction for demonstration purposes only in our Storybook. Spectrum CSS should only be used by implementations of Spectrum, or very simple applications that only need things like typography, checkboxes, text fields, etc.

Adobe maintains separate libraries written with web components and React that work in partnership with Spectrum CSS to create fully interactive Spectrum components.

The Spectrum Web Components library directly imports Spectrum CSS and optimizes it for use with web components.

Installing components

Each component is released on npm as a separate, individually versioned package inside of the @spectrum-css org.

To incorporate Spectrum CSS into your project, you install the components you need along with any peer dependencies you need for your implementation. Most peer dependencies are optional and can bring additional features when installed along with a component. For example a button can be rendered with or without an icon; so if your use-case leverages an icon with your button, you'll want to install icon as a peer dependency.

yarn add -DW @spectrum-css/tokens @spectrum-css/typography @spectrum-css/page @spectrum-css/icon @spectrum-css/button

Installed components will be available in the node_modules/@spectrum-css/ folder of your project.

All components in this library have a peer dependency on @spectrum-css/tokens, which is a local package that serves up the Spectrum design tokens as CSS custom properties (via Style dictionary). These custom properties are leveraged in all components to create a cohesive visual language and to allow for easy theming. If you choose not to use the provided @spectrum-css/tokens package, you must define your own custom properties or your components will render with a significant number of missing styles. When overriding certain styles is necessary, modifying styles is supported through the use of component-specific --mod prefixed properties. More on this below.

Using components in your project

Spectrum CSS components have build output that is designed to be used in a variety of ways:

<sup><a name="token-footnote">1</a></sup>: Token-driven CSS properties are properties whose values are mapped to a value in the @spectrum-css/tokens package. These values represent design-language and are meant to be used across platforms. In contrast, properties specific to web-based implementations will not have a token value assigned, so not all CSS properties will use custom properties.

Including assets

Start by including the base set of variables:

/* Include tokens */
@import "node_modules/@spectrum-css/tokens/dist/index.css";

/*
  For components with no other contexts available, load the
  index.css file from the component's package. These are components
  that do not have a spectrum or express context available.
*/
@import "node_modules/@spectrum-css/page/dist/index.css";
@import "node_modules/@spectrum-css/typography/dist/index.css";
@import "node_modules/@spectrum-css/icon/dist/index.css";

/*
  Recommended: For components with multiple contexts available, if you
  want access to all contexts, load the index.css file, which includes
  all contexts and component variables.
*/
@import "node_modules/@spectrum-css/button/dist/index.css";

/*
  If you only need the spectrum visual context: For components with
  multiple contexts available, load only the spectrum context by sourcing
  index-base.css and the spectrum theme from the themes directory.
*/
@import "node_modules/@spectrum-css/button/dist/index-base.css";
@import "node_modules/@spectrum-css/button/dist/themes/spectrum.css";

Tokens values are mapped to context-specific classes which can be applied to the <html> element or any place in your DOM where you wish to encapsulate or alter the visual language of your Spectrum components.

All contexts you want to use must be defined in order to load all the appropriate custom properties for the components you are using.

Global variables

Visual language
Scales

Scales represent the browsing context of the user. They are used to adjust the size of components to improve readability and usability on different devices.

Themes (colorstops)

Themes represent the color scheme of the user's browsing context. They are used to adjust the color of components to improve readability and usability in different environments.

Other themes are available but are in the process of being deprecated and should not be used in new projects.

Context example

Put together, we would define the context for our application in the following way:

<html class="spectrum spectrum--medium spectrum--light"></html>

To switch to Express, add the .spectrum--express class to the <html> element:

<html
  class="spectrum spectrum--medium spectrum--light spectrum--express"
></html>

Note the spectrum--express class is added to the existing classes; spectrum should always be present to ensure the correct visual language is loaded.

Because CSS custom properties honor the cascading nature of CSS, you can infinitely nest different contexts. For example, you could have a .spectrum--dark context inside of a .spectrum--light context, and components will honor the innermost context.

Modifying components

You can override variables and modify Spectrum CSS' look and feel by re-defining the custom properties in context. Look for the Custom Property API section in each component to determine which custom properties you can override. See Action Button for a complete example.

Importing UI icons

Some components require certain "UI icons" to render. These icons are released within the @spectrum-css/ui-icons package and are used by components like @spectrum-css/icon and @spectrum-css/actionbutton.

Based on which scales you'll be using, you can choose to load different files:

Note: If you're using spectrum-css-icons.svg, be sure to add .spectrum--medium or .spectrum--large to the <html> element, or you'll see both medium and large icons at once.

Importing workflow icons

If your app has any level of complexity, you'll need "workflow" icons to indicate actions. These icons are not required to render the base components, and instead are used within buttons or menu items for actions like share, play, justify, save, etc.

These icons are released within the @adobe/spectrum-css-workflow-icons package. Visit the Spectrum workflow icon list and click on any icon to get the SVG markup.

Language support

To take advantage of locale specific changes such as placeholders not italicizing Japanese, your application should specify a Content-Language response header or set the lang attribute.

In addition, you should set the dir attribute for components to render correctly.

For English, a left-to-right language:

<html lang="en" dir="ltr"></html>

For Arabic, a right-to-left language:

<html lang="ar" dir="rtl"></html>

Browser support

We maintain a modern codebase that supports the latest two versions of evergreen web browsers. The current list of browsers officially supported by Spectrum CSS can be found in the browserslist section of the project's package.json file. This setting is used by the build tools when the source files are built. If you require additional browser support for your project, the CSS can be processed further with your chosen tools.

Optimizing Spectrum CSS

Spectrum CSS is designed to be as modern and flexible as possible, and as such, leaves room for consumers to optimize in their own way. There are many tools and techniques you can use to optimize CSS for your project such as tree shaking, purging, and minification. If you are loading the entire set of @spectrum-css/tokens for example, you can safely tree shake the tokens to only include the variables you are using, often leading to a significant reduction in file size.

Contributing

A very special thank you to all of our contributors without whom this project would not be possible.

Want to join the team? Check out the contributing guidelines to get started.

Tasks

The following tasks are available:

CommandDescriptionExamples
cleanCleans all output files for the project and all componentsyarn clean
buildPerforms a build of all componentsyarn build
startPerforms a local development build of Storybookyarn start
compareThis compares the current version of components with the previous versions published to NPM and output a list of all the changes that have been made. This is useful for reviewing changes before a release. The information is provided in the command-line output as well as in a simple web page that is opened in your default browser upon completion. The web page includes links to the visual diffs for each component when the file sizes have changed. <ul><li>Components with no changes are not included in the output.</li><li>To run comparisons on one or multiple components, compare accepts a list of components as arguments. For example, yarn compare button will compare the current version of the button component with the previous version published to NPM. yarn compare button checkbox will compare the current version of the button and checkbox components with the previous versions published to NPM.</li><li>Named components should be space-separated.</li><li>Running compare with no inputs will automatically run against all packages.</li></ul>yarn compare<br/>yarn compare accordion<br/>yarn compare accordion actionbutton
lintProvides helpful updates and warnings for a component's package.json file. This helps keep all components in alignment. Use format to automatically fix any issues that are found. To run on a single component, use yarn linter accordion (where accordion is the name of the component or components you want to lint).yarn lint<br/>yarn linter accordion<br/>yarn linter accordion actionbutton
formatProvides helpful updates and warnings for a component's package.json file. This helps keep all components in alignment. To run on a single component, use yarn formatter accordion (where accordion is the name of the component or components you want to lint).yarn format<br/>yarn formatter accordion<br/>yarn formatter accordion actionbutton
refresh:envThis copies values for the project's .env file (an asset never committed to the repo as it contains login secrets) by using the .env.example file as a template. This script is useful when you need to update the .env file with new values from the .env.example file or when you checkout or clean the repo and need to restore the .env file.yarn refresh:env

Troubleshooting

As of February of 2024, the Spectrum CSS project has moved to a new tokens system (@spectrum-css/tokens instead of @spectrum-css/vars). If you are using Spectrum CSS and see that your styles are off, or not applying at all, ensure that you are using the correct tokens package for the component.