npm install @core-ds/primitives
After installing the @core-ds/primitives npm package, you can import and apply it in any JavaScript/TypeScript file:
import styled from "styled-components";
import { color, space } from "@core-ds/primitives";
const Example = styled.div`
color: ${color.white};
background-color: ${color.blue[500]};
padding: ${space[4]};
&:hover {
background-color: ${color.blue[800]};
}
`;
LESS Core Primitives are globally available in every LESS file in the iFixit/ifixit repo:
element {
color: @color-white;
background-color: @color-blue-500;
padding: @space-4;
&:hover {
background-color: @color-blue-800;
}
}
See the complete list of LESS variables here.
CSS Core Primitives are globally available on the :root
(html) element. They can be used in any (P)HTML file:
/* excerpt from core-primitives.css */
:root {
--color-black: #11161a;
--color-white: #fff;
...
--color-blue-500: #3b82f6;
--color-blue-600: #2563eb;
--color-blue-700: #1d4ed8;
--color-blue-800: #1e40af;
...
--space-3: 12px;
--space-4: 16px;
--space-5: 24px;
...
}
/* style the element */
element {
color: var(--color-white);
background-color: var(--color-blue-500);
padding: var(--space-4);
&:hover {
background-color: var(--color-blue-800);
}
}
See the current list of CSS Custom Properties here.
For more capabilities, check out the MDN Custom Properties article
Follow these steps to get the project setup on your local machine:
# Clone repo
git clone https://github.com/iFixit/core-primitives.git && cd core-primitives
# Install dependencies
npm install
Create a new branch for your changes:
git checkout -b <branch>
Apply your changes to index.json
, and keep index.d.ts
in sync.
Run npm run build
and verify core-primitives.css
and core-primitives.less
are correct.
Use GitHub to create a pull request for your branch.
After your pull request has been approved, bump the package version by running:
npm version [major | minor | patch]
Running npm version
will build, bump the version, and write the new data to package.json
and package-lock.json
. It will also create and push a version commit and tag.
Note: In the context of
@core-ds/primitives
, significant changes to the library or workflow, or removing primitives would be considered a major update, adding or updating primitives would be considered a minor update, and fixing primitives would be considered a patch. Non-code changes (e.g. documentation) do not require a version bump.
npm publish
After your pull request has been merged, create a new release to document your changes. Use the tag you generated in step 4 to create the release.
Done 🎉