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@dojo/widgets

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A suite of pre-built Dojo widgets, ready to use in your web application. These widgets are built using Dojo's widget authoring system (@dojo/framework/widget-core).

Usage

To use @dojo/widgets in your project, you will need to install the package:

npm install @dojo/widgets

This package contains all of the widgets in this repo.

All of the widgets are on the same release schedule, that is to say, that we release all widgets at the same time. Minor releases may include new widgets and/or features, whereas patch releases may contain fixes to more than 1 widget.

To use a widget in your application, you will need to import each widget individually:

import Button from '@dojo/widgets/button';

Each widget module has a default export of the widget itself, as well as named exports for things such as properties specific to the widget:

import Button, { ButtonProperties } from '@dojo/widgets/button';

Because each widget is a separate module, when you create a release build of your application, you will only include the widgets that you have explicitly imported. This allows our dojo cli build tooling to make sure that the production build of your application only includes the widgets you use and is as small as possible.

Features

  • All widgets are supported in all evergreen browsers (Chrome, Edge, Firefox, IE11+, and Safari) as well as popular mobile browsers (Mobile Safari, Chrome on Android).

  • All widgets are designed to be accessible. If custom ARIA semantics are required, widgets have an aria property that may be passed an object with custom aria-* attributes.

  • All widgets are fully themeable. Example themes are available in the @dojo/themes repository.

  • All widgets support internationalization (i18n)

Widgets

Live examples of current widgets are available in the widget showcase.

Form widgets

Button

Calendar

Checkbox/Toggle

ComboBox

Label

Listbox

Radio

RangeSlider

Select

Slider

TextArea

TextInput

TimePicker

Layout widgets

AccordionPane

SlidePane

SplitPane

TabController

TitlePane

Misc widgets

Grid

Dialog

GlobalEvent

Icon

Progress

Toolbar

Tooltip

Conventions

EventHandlers

You can register event handlers that get called when the corresponding events occur by passing the handlers into a widget's properties. The naming convention for event handlers is as follows:

  • if the parent of the widget has the power to decide if an event is successful, i.e. can cancel the event, then the child widget will call an event handler in the following format:

onRequest[X], e.g. for a close event, the event handler called by the child widget must be called onRequestClose

Here the child widget is requesting that the close event take place.

  • for events that will occur regardless of child/parent interaction, then the Request naming convention is dropped:

on[X], e.g. for a dismiss event, the event handler called by the child widget must be called onDismiss

Icons

We use font awesome for icons. Where a theme requires specific icons that are not part of the Font Awesome set, then those themes will ship their own icons.

There is an icon widget that aids in creating in proper semantics and provides type-checking for the type of icon.

Coding conventions

px vs. em - we specify font sizes in px. When creating a widget, spacing (margin, padding) should be specified using px unless the design calls for proportional spacing, in which case em can be used.

Z-index layering

Widgets adhere to a basic convention for using specific ranges of z-index values based on function and visual context. This convention is followed in both individual widget CSS and in the Dojo theme styles. These values can be overridden in a custom theme if necessary since no z-index values are set in fixed styles.

The range definitions are as follows:

  • 0 - 100: Any specific component layering, e.g. a caption over an image.
  • 100 - 200: Tooltips and other small, local, interactive overlays.
  • 200 - 300: Dropdowns. Common examples include menus and select boxes.
  • 300 - 400: Fixed position elements. Fixed headers and footers are clear examples of fixed page elements, but it could also include a drag-and-drop element in a drag state.
  • 400 - 500: Dialogs and other full-page overlays. Slide panes are another good example of a common UI pattern in this range. It includes any widget that is intended to cover all page content, or that often is used with an underlay.
  • 500 +*: Alerts and special cases. Toast notifications could potentially be in this range, or any component important enough to interrupt all other interaction.

How to customize a widget

There are many ways in which you can customize the behavior and appearance of Dojo widgets. See the widget-core README for examples of how to customize the theme or a specific CSS class of a widget.

Or can you write your own widget that extends an official widget.

Extending widgets

Because all Dojo widgets are Classes, you can simply extend the Class to add or change its behavior.

export class MyWidget extends Button {
...
}

Dojo widgets provide standard extension points to allow you to customize their behavior. For more details, please refer to the widget authoring system.

Individual widgets also provide certain types of extension points where applicable:

  • render*: Large render functions are split up into multiple smaller pieces that can be more easily overridden to create custom vdom.
  • getModifierClasses: Modify the array of conditionally applied classes like css.selected or css.disabled. Not all widgets include these extension points, and some have additional overridable methods.

How do I contribute?

We appreciate your interest! Please see the Dojo Meta Repository for the Contributing Guidelines and Style Guide.

Note that all changes to widgets should work with the dojo theme. To test this start the example page (instructions at Installation section) and select the dojo option at the top of the page.

Installation

To start working with this package, clone the repository and run npm install.

In order to build the project run npm run build.

Testing

Test cases MUST be written using Intern using the Object test interface and Assert assertion interface.

90% branch coverage MUST be provided for all code submitted to this repository, as reported by istanbul’s combined coverage results for all supported platforms.

To test locally in node run:

npm run test

To test against browsers with a local selenium server run:

npm run test:functional

Viewing widget examples locally

Each Dojo widget includes functioning example code so you can view the widget. To view individual widget example:

  1. Run npm run build:test in your terminal
  2. Run npm run examples
  3. Open the newly built project at http://localhost:5000/_build/common/example/ in your web browser
  4. By default, no widget is selected, open the dropdown to select a widget
  5. Observe the page reloads and the selected widget displays

Watching widget example code

Running npm run build each time you wish to view a small change can be tedious, instead to have your files watched run:

tsc -w

With that command, TypeScript watches for changes and recompiles when necessary.

Licensing information

© 2018 JS Foundation. New BSD license.

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