open-nomad/ui/stories/components/dropdown.stories.js

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UI: Migrate to Storybook (#6507) I originally planned to add component documentation, but as this dragged on and I found that JSDoc-to-Markdown sometimes needed hand-tuning, I decided to skip it and focus on replicating what was already present in Freestyle. Adding documentation is a finite task that can be revisited in the future. My goal was to migrate everything from Freestyle with as few changes as possible. Some adaptations that I found necessary: • the DelayedArray and DelayedTruth utilities that delay component rendering until slightly after initial render because without them: ◦ charts were rendering with zero width ◦ the JSON viewer was rendering with empty content • Storybook in Ember renders components in a routerless/controllerless context by default, so some component stories needed changes: ◦ table pagination/sorting stories access to query params, which necessitates some reaching into Ember internals to start routing and dynamically generate a Storybook route/controller to render components into ◦ some stories have a faux controller as part of their Storybook context that hosts setInterval-linked dynamic computed properties • some jiggery-pokery with anchor tags ◦ inert href='#' had to become href='javascript:; ◦ links that are actually meant to navigate need target='_parent' so they don’t navigate inside the Storybook iframe Maybe some of these could be addressed by fixes in ember-cli-storybook but I’m wary of digging around in there any more than I already have, as I’ve lost a lot of time to Storybook confusion and frustrations already 😞 The STORYBOOK=true environment variable tweaks some environment settings to get things working as expected in the Storybook context. I chose to: • use angle bracket invocation within stories rather than have to migrate them soon after having moved to Storybook • keep Freestyle around for now for its palette and typeface components
2020-01-21 21:46:32 +00:00
import hbs from 'htmlbars-inline-precompile';
export default {
title: 'Components|Dropdown',
};
let options = [
{ name: 'Consul' },
{ name: 'Nomad' },
{ name: 'Packer' },
{ name: 'Terraform' },
{ name: 'Vagrant' },
{ name: 'Vault' },
];
export let Standard = () => {
return {
template: hbs`
<h5 class="title is-5">Dropdown</h5>
<PowerSelect @options={{options}} @selected={{selectedOption}} @searchField="name" @searchEnabled={{gt options.length 10}} @onChange={{action (mut selectedOption)}} as |option|>
{{option.name}}
</PowerSelect>
<p class="annotation">Power Select currently fulfills all of Nomad's dropdown needs out of the box.</p>
`,
context: {
options,
},
};
};
export let Resized = () => {
return {
template: hbs`
<h5 class="title is-5">Dropdown resized</h5>
<div class="columns">
<div class="column is-3">
<PowerSelect @options={{options}} @selected={{selectedOption2}} @searchField="name" @searchEnabled={{gt options.length 10}} @onChange={{action (mut selectedOption2)}} as |option|>
{{option.name}}
</PowerSelect>
</div>
</div>
<p class="annotation">Dropdowns are always 100% wide. To control the width of a dropdown, adjust the dimensions of its container. One way to achieve this is using columns.</p>
`,
context: {
options,
},
};
};
export let Search = () => {
return {
template: hbs`
<h5 class="title is-5">Dropdown with search</h5>
<div class="columns">
<div class="column is-3">
<PowerSelect @options={{manyOptions}} @selected={{selectedOption3}} @searchField="name" @searchEnabled={{gt manyOptions.length 10}} @onChange={{action (mut selectedOption3)}} as |option|>
{{option.name}}
</PowerSelect>
</div>
</div>
<p class="annotation">Whether or not the dropdown has a search box is configurable. Typically the default is to show a search once a dropdown has more than 10 options.</p>
`,
context: {
manyOptions: [
'One',
'Two',
'Three',
'Four',
'Five',
'Six',
'Seven',
'Eight',
'Nine',
'Ten',
'Eleven',
'Twelve',
'Thirteen',
'Fourteen',
'Fifteen',
].map(name => ({ name })),
},
};
};