Skip to content

SwedbankPay/design.swedbankpay.com

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Swedbank Pay Design Guide

Version Tag Codecov

Swedbank Pay Design Guide

Installing / Getting started

npm install @swedbankpay/design-guide

Usage

Javascript

You can import the entire javascript library:

import dg from "@swedbankpay/design-guide";
dg.script.initAll();

or only the components you need:

import { sheet } from "@swedbankpay/design-guide";
sheet.init();

Less

Make sure your bundler can handle .less files

@import url("@swedbankpay/design-guide/src/less/swedbankpay.less");

Our .less files use certain assets such as icons and fonts. These assets will automagically be handled by your bundler and be part of your own output. Usually this is your /dist folder. Your compiled .css file will then have proper references and urls to assets within your own /dist folder.

By importing the .less file, you will also get access to variables such as @brand-primary

Getting started as a developer

The following guides are for further development of the Design Guide, and are not necessary if you only plan to use the Design Guide in your project.

Prerequisites

Design Guide requires Node.js (includes npm).

Installing

  1. Open a terminal and navigate to repo root
  2. npm ci
  3. npm start
  4. Go to http://localhost:3000
  5. Works? If not, contact us on Slack (#design-guide-general – only available to Swedbank Pay and PayEx employees).
  6. Get to work.

Set up Git Hooks

  • Open a terminal and navigate to repo root
  • Run git config core.hooksPath .githooks

Developing

It is important to note that as a developer, this project supports two brands: Swedbank Pay and PayEx. Webpack is configured to accept a brand flag which is used to collect different sets of theme variables. Swedbank Pay is default flag. E.g. npm start sets the theme to Swedbank Pay, while npm run start:payex sets the theme to … you guessed it, PayEx. Check out the package.json file for additional scripts.

Built with

Setting up Dev

  • Running the command npm start starts the Webpack dev server, (which is configured in ~/webpack.config.js). If any changes is made to this file, or any files directly influencing this file (i.e. any loaders or plugins) you need to restart the server.

  • The script npm start will start the dev server in development mode. If you wish to run the dev server in production-like environment run the command npm run start:prod.

Importing components

When importing different components in the files you create, you can use shortcuts for common paths. The shortcuts are as following:

Shortcut Description
~ root of the project (example import package from "~/package";)
@src ~/src-folder (example import dg from "@src/scripts";)
@components ~/src/App/components-folder (example import Alert from "@components/Alert";)
@docutils ~/src/App/utils-folder (example import { SearchBox } from "@docutils";)
@constants ~/src/constants-folder

The shortcuts are specified in the ~/.babelrc-file. Specifying the prefix-shortcuts in the ~/jsconfig.json-file enables path intellisense for the shortcuts (at least in VSCode).

Building

To start building, run the command npm run build to start in dev-mode, or npm run build:prod for production-mode. This will make webpack start bundling everything and make static files in the ~/dist/-folder. Also make sure all tests pass, or make changes to them accordingly.

Note: Running the command npm run build:prod will delete all files already located in ~/dist.

Versioning

Design Guide uses semantic versioning. This means that internally, Design Guide will use a major.minor.patch version number to signal what the changes in each release surmount to. This also means both CSS and JavaScript files are versioned in lockstep, so whenever a new version of the CSS is released, a new version of the JavaScript will be as well.

Tests

  1. Open a terminal and navigate to repo root

  2. Run the command npm test

    • Many of the tests are snapshot based, and runs against already created snapshots. If you need to update the snapshots due to changes run the command npm run test:update.

    • A test coverage report is generated after running the tests. This can be found in ~/coverage.

Note: Snapshot testing is pretty unforgiving, so if you make ANY changes to how a component, which already has a snapshot, is rendered, the tests WILL crash! So make sure to run npm run test:update before committing.

Code style

Coding style rules are set in ~/.eslintrc & ~/.stylelintrc.

Make sure to follow the syntax rules enforced by ESLint & Stylelint.

Contributing

  • Bug reports: File bugs as Github issues.

  • Feature suggestions: File as Github issue or discuss the feature on Slack (#design-guide-general).

  • Code contributions: Code contributions are highly encouraged, but discuss the feature/bugfix in an issue or on Slack before you start coding.

Creating a release

Before merging to master to create a release, make sure you follow these steps:

  • Be in the develop branch

  • Pull latest changes

  • Create a release branch where the name is the new tag. (release/x.x.x)

  • Update the version in ~/package.json

    • then run npm i to also update package-lock

    • run npx update-browserslist-db@latest to update browserslist

  • Make sure the RELEASE_NOTES.md is correct (date and version) and only contains changes for the current release

  • Update the changelog constants on the Home page ( "src\App\Home\constants.js" )

  • Update statusBadges in routes

  • Run tests

  • Commit the changes and create a pull request from release/x.x.x branch to master and develop

    • use the release-notes as PR description
  • When approved, rename the merge commit to Release x.x.x and merge

  • Change branch to master

  • Pull latest changes

  • Create and push a new tag with the new release commit:

    1. git tag -l Make sure the tag is not in list.
    2. git tag x.x.x And check if the new tag is in list.
    3. git push origin x.x.x
  • Remember to change branch back to develop.

  • In Jira trigger release

  • In GH publish Release

AppVeyor will now create and deploy a release on both github and design.swedbankpay.com.

GitHub Actions will also create and deploy a release on Azure for the PayEx brand, and create a new NPM package.

Core development team

Contents of this project

Folder Description
~/coverage Test coverage report for the project (not commited to the repository).
~/dist Static files generated by Webpack (not commited to the repository).
~/src All the source files.
~/build Config files for AppVeyor, and other files required for the AppVeyor build process.
~/tools Various tools, mostly related to the build/deploy process.

Notable files

 File Description
.babelrc Babel configuration.
.eslintignore List of files/directories ESLint will ignore (similar to .gitignore)
.eslintrc Eslint configuration.
.prettierignore List of files/directories ESLint will ignore (similar to .gitignore)
.prettierrc.json Prettier configuration.
.stylelintrc Stylelint configuration.
CHANGELOG.md Collection of changes made to the project. Insert your changes here.
jest.config.js jest configuration.
jest.setup.js Script file that will run before jest executes the tests, polyfills and other useful snippets.
webpack.config.js Webpack configuration.

Copyright, license and credits

Code and documentation © Swedbank Pay and contributors, released under the MIT License.

Inspired by Bootstrap and Materialize.