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LivingStyleGuide Build Status

Easily create living style guides/front-end style guides/pattern libraries by adding Markdown documentation to your Sass project. Follow @LSGorg for updates.

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Getting Started

Command Line Interface

  1. Setup

    $ gem install livingstyleguide
    
  2. Create sass/styleguide.lsg (replace sass/ with the directory name of your Sass files) with:

    // Replace with your default Sass/SCSS file name:
    @scss application.css.scss
    
    // Set the HTML title of the document:
    @title My Living Style Guide
    
    // Import all your style guide files
    @import sass/**/*.lsg
    
  3. Write documentation for each module sass/partials/_buttons.lsg (to describe _buttons.scss in the same folder):

     # Buttons
    
     ```
     <button class="button">Example button</button>
     ```
    
     ```
     <button class="button -primary">Example button</button>
     ```
    
  4. Call livingstyleguide compile sass/styleguide.lsg public/styleguide.html This will automatically:

    • Combine all Markdown files and convert them to HTML
    • Create a beautiful style guide
    • Saves the style guide as public/styleguide.html
    • Show the HTML source syntax highlighted close to each example

Tips for the Command Line Interface

Rails Integration

Be aware: From LSG v2 on Rails 3.x is not supported due to outdated Sprockets and Tilt versions.

  1. Setup: Add this line to your application’s Gemfile:

    gem "livingstyleguide"
    

    And then execute:

    $ bundle
    $ rails s
    
  2. Create app/assets/stylesheets/styleguide.html.lsg with:

    // Replace with your default Sass/SCSS file name:
    @scss application.css.scss
    
    // Set the HTML title of the document:
    @title My Living Style Guide
    
    // Import all your style guide files
    @import **/*.lsg
    
  3. Write documentation for each module app/assets/stylesheets/partials/_buttons.lsg (to describe _buttons.sass in the same folder):

    # Buttons
    
    ```
    <button class="button">Example button</button>
    ```
    
    ```
    <button class="button -primary">Example button</button>
    ```
    
  4. Open http://localhost:3000/assets/styleguide.html. This will automatically:

    • Combine all Markdown files and convert them to HTML
    • Create a beautiful style guide
    • Show the HTML source syntax highlighted close to each example

Tips for Rails

Using it with Rails 4

Since Rails 4 non-digest assets are not created anymore. If you want a public sharable url consider using something like Non Stupid Digest Assets

Middleman Integration

  1. Setup: Add this line to your application’s Gemfile:

    gem "livingstyleguide"
    

    And then execute:

    $ bundle
    $ middleman
    
  2. Create source/styleguide.html.lsg with:

    // Replace with your default Sass/SCSS file name:
    @scss application.css.scss
    
    // Set the HTML title of the document:
    @title My Living Style Guide
    
    // Import all your style guide files
    @import css/**/*.lsg
    
  3. Write documentation for each module source/css/partials/_buttons.lsg (to describe _buttons.sass in the same folder):

     # Buttons
    
     ```
     <button class="button">Example button</button>
     ```
    
     ```
     <button class="button -primary">Example button</button>
     ```
    
  4. Open http://localhost:4567/styleguide.html. This will automatically:

    • Combine all Markdown files and convert them to HTML
    • Create a beautiful style guide
    • Show the HTML source syntax highlighted close to each example

Tips for Middleman

Grunt

See NexwayGroup/grunt-livingstyleguide.

Gulp

See efacilitation/gulp-livingstyleguide.

Broccoli

See livingstyleguide/broccoli-livingstyleguide.

Ember CLI

See livingstyleguide/broccoli-livingstyleguide (comments on Ember CLI can be found there).


Writing the style guide

Just write normal Markdown. The style guide examples are written in code blocks surrounded by three backticks:

```
<h1>This is an example</h1>
```

Just make sure, when you write a headline, put a space between # and the headline. In other words: # Headline, not #Headline.

In addition to Markdown, there are several commands (starting with an @) which automate things to make generating style guides more fun. Commands can be used within and outside of code blocks, but will have a different meaning. Commands available are:

Importing Files

You can import any other *.lsg file at any place within any *.lsg file:

```
// Import a file:
@import folder/file.lsg

// Import a file (`.lsg` will be added by default):
@import folder/file

// Import a file starting with `_` (folder/_file.lsg); this works automatically:
@import folder/file

// Import multiple files:
@import folder/*.lsg
@import folder/*

// Importing from multiple folders:
@import **/*.lsg
@import **/*

// Importing a Haml file (the resulting HTML will be rendered into the style guide):
@import folder/file.haml
@import folder/*.haml
@import **/*.haml
```

All file types supported by Tilt can be imported. By default, @import is looking for *.lsg files.

Writing Examples

A default example outputs the HTML source as:

Example:

```
<button class="button">Example button</button>
```

There are more commands to generate output. They start with an @ and can be put in the code block:

Colors

You can automatically generate color swatches out of your Sass variables:

@colors {
  $light-red  $gray  $green  $red  $dark-red  $black
}

By clicking the color swatch in the style guide, users can copy the hex code of the color (useful for designers). When pointing the cursor on the variable name, it will be copied on click instead (useful for developers).

The output will respect newlines. The example below will create a 3 × 3 matrix of color swatches and groups shades in columns which might be more easy to understand. - leaves a cell empty in the matrix:

@colors {
  -       $light-red  $gray
  $green  $red        -
  -       $dark-red   $black
}

The LivingStyleGuide also supports CSS colors and Sass functions. All of them will work:

@colors {
  red        #ca1f70              #FFF               rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5)
  $my-color  my-color-function()  lighten(red, 10%)  darken($my-color, 20%)
}

Haml Examples

This will output the code as HTML but display the syntax highlighted source as Haml (learn how to use Haml by default):

```
@haml
%button.button Example button
```

Manipulating CSS per example

You can add any CSS to each example if it helps to make it better in the style guide only. For example, add some margin between elements:

```
<button class="button">Example button</button>
<button class="button -primary">Example button</button>
@css {
  .button + .button {
    margin-left: 3em;
  }
}
```

This adds 3em margin between both buttons. To avoid this to affect other examples, the CSS code will be scoped to this example only (each example automatically gets a unique id).

If you need the same CSS code for several examples, you can put the CSS outside of the example. This way it will be scoped to the current file:

```
<button class="button">Example button</button>
<button class="button -primary">Example button</button>
```

```
<a class="button">Example button</a>
<a class="button -primary">Example button</a>
```

@css {
  .button + .button {
    margin-left: 3em;
  }
}

For Sass you can also use @sass and @scss:

@sass
  .button + .button
    margin-left: 3em

@scss {
  .button + .button {
    margin-left: 3em;
  }
}

Within the @scss/@sass helper, all variables, mixins, … of your project are available. For example, if my-styles.scss sets $my-project-margin, you can write this:

@scss my-styles.scss

@scss {
  .button + .button {
    margin-left: $my-project-margin;
  }
}

It is possible to add Sass code without scoping (works for @css/scss/sass).

@scss scope: global {
  .code { ... }
}

Or as a shortcut inspired by Sass’ global variables (for @scss/@sass):

@scss !global {
  .code { ... }
}

JavaScript Examples

This will show and execute the JavaScript, e. g. you designed tabs and need few lines of jQuery to bring them alive.

```
@javascript {
  $(".button").click(function() {
    alert("Hello World!");
  });
}
```

CoffeeScript Examples

Same example but using CoffeeScript. It will be executed as JavaScript and displayed as CoffeeScript:

```
@coffee-script
  $(".button").click ->
    alert "Hello World!"
```

Font Examples

Show which fonts should be used on your website—this will output and example text block (A—Z, a—z, 0—9, and some special characters) of the given font. It accepts valid CSS like for font: 32px comic sans ms;.

@font-example 32px comic sans ms

Use your own text (defaults to “ABC…\nabc…\n123…\n!&…” if not set):

@font-example 32px comic sans ms {
  Schweißgequält zündet Typograf Jakob
  verflixt öde Pangramme an.
}

Require Ruby files or Gems

You can require any Ruby file (e.g. for custom commands) or Ruby Gems (e.g. a Compass plugin:

Loads `my-ruby-file.rb`:
@require my-ruby-file

Loads the Susy Gem (must be installed on your system):
@require susy

Output Code

If you just want to output code with no extras (just like in a normal Markdown file), you only need to add the language:

``` html
<div>Some HTML that just gets syntax-higlighted but not put into the document’s DOM</div>
```

No syntax highlighter:

``` plain
<div>Some HTML that just gets syntax-higlighted but not put into the document’s DOM</div>
```

Default Options

You can set options to apply to all commands or all commands giving a name. This is useful, when you depend on Haml or other templating engines. Add a list of default commands to your styleguide.html.lsg:

For example without defaults:

@header
  @haml
  .my-header My Style Guide

```
@haml
.my-example
```

With defaults:

@default type: haml

@header
  .my-header My Style Guide

```
.my-example
```

Working with Existing View Templates

If you want your style guide to work as an API, you might have views already written somewhere else and don’t want to write the same HTML code into the style guide.

First, there is the @data command, which sets local variables to render the view:

```
<h1><%= foo %></h1>
@type erb
@data {
  "foo": "bar"
}
```

This will render as <h1>bar</h1> in the HTML but show the ERB source below. The data is written using JSON or YAML syntax (as JSON is a subset of YAML):

```
<h1><%= foo %></h1>
@type erb
@data format: yaml
  foo: bar
```

If there is already a view template, let’s name it views/headline.html.erb, you can use it:

```
@use views/headline.html.erb
@data {
  "foo": "bar"
}
```

Note: You don’t need to set the @type as this is taken from the view template file suffix.

Tipp: Edge Cases

By repeating using the same template with different data, you can show edge cases—like very long user names or missing values—in your style guide.

Styling the Style Guide

Custom Header

The examples in the screenshot above use custom headers to have an individual look. You can add whatever HTML you want and some Sass to style it to your styleguide.html.lsg:

@header {
  <div class="my-header">
    <img src="my-style-guide-logo.svg" alt="My Style Guide">
    <h1>My Style Guide</h1>
  </div>
}

You can use any templating engine supported by Tilt:

@header type: haml
  .my-header
    %img(src="my-style-guide-logo.svg" alt="My Style Guide")
    %h1 My Style Guide

Custom Footer

See Custom Header, just use @footer.

Custom Head Elements

See Custom Header, just use @head. This way you can add any <meta> tag or link additional files.

Search

Enable search for the style guide:

@search-box

This will add a search box on top of the style guide which commands the content via JavaScript.

You can also customize (e.g. translate) the placeholder for the search box:

@search-box placeholder: Buscar

Custom Settings

Most of the design of the style guide itself, is calculated by few variables in the styleguide.html.lsg:

@style font-family: comic sans ms, arial, sans-serif
@style font-size: 7em
@style background-color: red
@style border-color: $my-color
@style color: #eee
@style code-color: darken(red, 10%)
@style color-swatch-border-radius: 0

Just play a bit and create an individual style guide which represents your personal taste :)

Including JavaScript

If you need external JavaScript files to be included in the style guide, there are two options: before (in the <head>) or after (just before the closing </body>). It accepts a list of URLs (ending with *.js) or plain JavaScript code:

@javascript-before assets/modernizr.js

@javascript-after http://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.1.3.min.js
@javascript-after assets/application.js
@javascript-after {
  $(function() {
    // custom code
  });
}

If you use @javascript or @coffee-script, your application files and jQuery might need to be included in the javascript-before section.

Using CoffeeScript

Same example as above, just using CoffeeScript. Note, it is using the indented syntax (no colon but indent following lines by two spaces) which works well with CoffeeScript.

@javascript-before assets/modernizr.js

@javascript-after http://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.1.3.min.js
@javascript-after assets/application.js
@javascript-after transpiler: coffee-script
  $ ->
    # custom code

Installation

Add this line to your application’s Gemfile:

gem "livingstyleguide"

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install livingstyleguide

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Check your changes for coding style:
  1. Commit your changes (git commit -am "Add some feature")
  2. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  3. Create new Pull Request

Code of Conduct

We do follow the Contributor Covenant Code of Conduct; our version including contact information can be found in CODE-OF-CONDUCT.de.


Copyright

Copyright 2012—2017 Nico Hagenburger. See MIT-LICENSE.md for details. Get in touch with @hagenburger on Twitter or open an issue.