Armstrong is a React component library made by Rocketmakers written in Typescript and SCSS.
JIRA board (for internal use only)
Armstrong is installed using npm.
npm install @rocketmakers/armstrong
# or
yarn add @rocketmakers/armstrongImport the Armstrong stylesheet at the root of your project with:
import '@rocketmakers/armstrong/css';Then to use a component in your project
import { Button } from '@rocketmakers/armstrong';
const MyComponent: React.FC = () => {
return (
<div>
<Button>I'm a button</Button>
</div>
);
};See Storybook for a list of all available components
For details on using Armstrong forms, see Forms
If you're internal to Rocketmakers, post in the #armstrong channel and raise an issue here
Otherwise, raise an issue in Github and follow the issue template
First cd into the root of the repo and run
npm run setupWe have a Storybook implementation which will pick up any files with the pattern *.stories.tsx or *.stories.mdx
For Storybook, run
npm run storybookthen go to localhost:6006
Armstrong uses eslint, style-lint, and prettier for linting.
Packages for these are managed as dev dependencies in NPM, and configuration files can be found in module/
We recommend using the vscode plugins stylelint, eslint, and prettier to make errors show in vscode, and to allow auto fixing functionality.
Armstrong uses Jest for unit testing, @testing-library/react-hooks for hook testing, and Storybook for component testing.
Packages for these are managed as dev dependencies in NPM, and configuration files can be found in module/ and in module/.jest and module/.storybook respectively.
Tests can be run using npm test for all tests, or npm test-jest and npm test-storybook respectively.
We recommend using the vscode plugins jest, jest-runner, and storybook helper to manage test runs.
Please work in feature branches named feature/* branched from main
When your work is ready, submit a pull request into main and (if you're internal to Rocketmakers) post a link to your pull request in the #armstrong-dev slack channel for someone to review.
Github will run an Action to test linting and to see if Storybook builds before your branch can be merged.
Ensure Commitizen is installed for templating your commit messages.
When your feature branch has passed code review and been merged, a release will be triggered automatically.
Armstrong uses Semantic release for automatic versioning and publishing based on Commitizen formatted messages from main.
The type of release will be worked out from all of the commit messages in your merge. So the highest of the following will dictate the version
fix: will be a patch 0.0.X
feat: will be minor 0.X.0
breaking: will be major X.0.0
chore: won't trigger a release
So basically, do your work on a branch feature/*, make sure all of your commit messages go through Commitizen, and when you're happy open a PR onto main.
When it gets approved and merged in, the release type will automatically be worked out based on the highest (breaking > feat > fix) of all the commits that are part of that merge and a tag and version will be published to npm automatically.
This release happens in a Github Action labelled release. Logs can be found here
Once a release is complete, please post a cursory message in the #armstrong Slack channel with a list of changes.