2. Building pages
Now that we have a React app using the UI Shell, it’s time to build a few static pages. In this step, we’ll become comfortable with the Carbon grid and various Carbon components.
- Fork, clone and branch
- Install grid
- Add landing page grid
- Build landing page
- Style landing page
- Add repo page grid
- Build repo page
- Style repo page
- Submit pull request
Preview
A preview of what you’ll build:
Fork, clone and branch
This tutorial has an accompanying GitHub repository called carbon-tutorial that we’ll use as a starting point for each step. If you haven’t forked and cloned that repository yet, and haven’t added the upstream remote, go ahead and do so by following the step 1 instructions.
Branch
With your repository all set up, let’s check out the branch for this tutorial step’s starting point.
git fetch upstreamgit checkout -b react-step-2 upstream/react-step-2
Build and start app
Install the app’s dependencies (in case you’re starting fresh in your current directory and not continuing from the previous step):
yarn
Then, start the app:
yarn start
You should see something similar to where the previous step left off.
IE11 polyfills
Before we get started with this step, we’ll be adding some components that
require IE11 polyfills. As shown in the
Carbon React documentation,
go ahead and add these imports to the top of the root index.js
. They aren’t
all needed, but we’ll add them all to play it safe for the duration of the
tutorial.
src/index.jsimport 'core-js/modules/es7.array.includes';import 'core-js/modules/es6.array.fill';import 'core-js/modules/es6.string.includes';import 'core-js/modules/es6.string.trim';import 'core-js/modules/es7.object.values';
Install grid
In our last step we added our styles, component and icon packages. Now that
we’re building the pages with grid, we need to install one more Carbon package.
Stop your development environment (CTRL-C
) and:
yarn add @carbon/grid@10.17.0
In index.scss
, we need to configure our grid to use 16 columns instead of the
default 12 columns. We do this by adding grid-columns-16: true
in our
$feature-flags
.
src/index.scss$feature-flags: (grid-columns-16: true,);
Run yarn start
so we can begin building.
Add landing page grid
Let’s add our grid elements to LandingPage.js
.
In order to use the grid, we need to wrap everything in a
<div className="bx--grid">
. We can continue to make rows by adding a
<div className="bx--row">
inside the grid, as well as make columns within
those rows by adding <div className="bx--col-[breakpoint]-[size]">
.
Our column sizes are specified by the number of columns they’ll be spanning. If
we use bx--col-lg-4
, it means it’ll span 4 of the 16 columns. If we use
bx--col-lg-8
it means it’ll span 8 of the 16 columns, and so on.
We’ve included the designs for this tutorial app in the design.sketch
file
found as a top-level file in the carbon-tutorial
repository. But, if you don’t
have Sketch installed and available to inspect the design, we’ll provide
screenshots.
We’ll break this down into three rows. The first row with the gray background doesn’t appear to need any columns. The second row with the white background looks like it has two columns of different widths. The third row with the gray background looks like it has four columns of equal width.
We’ll make rows like so:
src/content/LandingPage/LandingPage.jsreturn (<div className="bx--grid bx--grid--full-width landing-page"><div className="bx--row landing-page__banner"><div className="bx--col-lg-16">1</div></div><div className="bx--row landing-page__r2"><div className="bx--col-md-4 bx--col-lg-7">7/16</div><div className="bx--col-md-4 bx--offset-lg-1 bx--col-lg-8">8/16</div></div>
We added a class of bx--grid--full-width
to the grid container since our rows
need to expand the whole page without any margins. We also added some custom
classes like landing-page
, landing-page__banner
, landing-page__r2
, etc.,
which we will use later.
Also, take notice of the second row. The tab content only covers 7 columns at
this large viewport to prevent overly-large line lengths, so we needed to add a
1 column offset bx--offset-lg-1
to second column to fill the full 16 columns
in the grid. Then, both of those columns have bx--col-md-4
classes so they are
of equal width at medium-sized viewports.
Build landing page
We’ll start adding HTML elements and components by row.
First row
In our first row we’ll need a BreadCrumb
component. First, let’s import the
components we need. Because we’ll be importing several components for this page,
we’ll import them directly from the carbon-components-react
package instead of
the direct path for each one.
src/content/LandingPage/LandingPage.jsimport { Breadcrumb, BreadcrumbItem } from 'carbon-components-react';
We can now add our component to the first row, along with a header, like so:
src/content/LandingPage/LandingPage.js<div className="bx--row landing-page__banner"><div className="bx--col-lg-16"><Breadcrumb noTrailingSlash><BreadcrumbItem><a href="/">Getting started</a></BreadcrumbItem></Breadcrumb><h1 className="landing-page__heading">Design & build with Carbon</h1></div>
You may notice that the styles look off. Don’t worry, we’ll fix these later.
Second row
In our second row we’ll need Tabs
and Button
components. We’ll update the
carbon-components-react
import to:
src/content/LandingPage/LandingPage.jsimport {Breadcrumb,BreadcrumbItem,Button,Tabs,Tab,} from 'carbon-components-react';
Before we can render the tabs, we need to add some props for the component after the import. These example props came from the React Tabs Story in Storybook.
src/content/LandingPage/LandingPage.jsconst props = {tabs: {selected: 0,role: 'navigation',},tab: {role: 'presentation',tabIndex: 0,},
Modify the second row to use the Tab
component.
src/content/LandingPage/LandingPage.js<div className="bx--row landing-page__r2"><div className="bx--col bx--no-gutter"><Tabs {...props.tabs}><Tab {...props.tab} label="About"><div className="bx--grid bx--grid--no-gutter bx--grid--full-width"><div className="bx--row landing-page__tab-content"><div className="bx--col-md-4 bx--col-lg-7">7/16</div><div className="bx--col-md-4 bx--offset-lg-1 bx--col-lg-8">8/16
Hold up! If you were to run
DAP to check for
accessibility violations, you’d see
Multiple navigation landmarks must have unique labels specified with aria-label or aria-labelledby
because both the Breadcrumb
and Tabs
components use <nav>
elements. To
fix, add aria-label
to the Breadcrumb
opening tag:
<Breadcrumb noTrailingSlash aria-label="Page navigation">
Same goes for the Tabs
opening tag:
<Tabs {...props.tabs} aria-label="Tab navigation">
Next, we’ll need to add some styling overrides to move the tabs to the right on
large viewports. Create a file _overrides.scss
in src/content/LandingPage
with this declaration block.
src/content/LandingPage/_overrides.scss.landing-page__r2 .bx--tabs--scrollable {transform: translateZ(0);justify-content: flex-end;}.landing-page__r2 .bx--tab-content {padding: 0;}
Then in _landing-page.scss
add this import at the top of the file.
src/content/LandingPage/_landing-page.scss@import './overrides.scss';
We can now add our images and text for each column in the first Tab
in
LandingPage.js
.
src/content/LandingPage/LandingPage.js<Tab {...props.tab} label="About"><div className="bx--grid bx--grid--no-gutter bx--grid--full-width"><div className="bx--row landing-page__tab-content"><div className="bx--col-md-4 bx--col-lg-7"><h2 className="landing-page__subheading">What is Carbon?</h2><p className="landing-page__p">Carbon is IBM’s open-source design system for digital
Now let’s set the image size in _landing-page.scss
:
src/content/LandingPage/_landing-page.scss.landing-page__illo {max-width: 100%;}
Assuming that the second and third tab would have a similar design, we would set them up in the same way. However, since our design specs don’t show those tabs, we’ll leave the code as is.
Third row
The third row will be created in a later tutorial, so we’ll just add the headers for now.
src/content/LandingPage/LandingPage.js<div className="bx--row landing-page__r3"><div className="bx--col-md-4 bx--col-lg-4"><h3 className="landing-page__label">The Principles</h3></div><div className="bx--col-md-4 bx--col-lg-4">Carbon is Open</div><div className="bx--col-md-4 bx--col-lg-4">Carbon is Modular</div><div className="bx--col-md-4 bx--col-lg-4">Carbon is Consistent</div></div>
Style landing page
We’ve added basic layout styles in _landing-page.scss
, so now let’s add type,
color, and spacing styles to match the design. We’ll be using our
spacing tokens.
In app.scss
, add these imports at the top of the file so we can use Carbon
breakpoints, tokens, and typography Sass mixins and functions:
src/app.scss@import 'carbon-components/scss/globals/scss/vendor/@carbon/type/scss/font-family.scss';@import 'carbon-components/scss/globals/scss/vendor/@carbon/layout/scss/breakpoint.scss';@import 'carbon-components/scss/globals/scss/typography.scss';@import 'carbon-components/scss/globals/scss/vars.scss';
Banner
Back to _landing-page.scss
, we need to add space above the breadcrumb and
below the heading. For that, add:
src/content/LandingPage/_landing-page.scss.landing-page__banner {padding-top: $spacing-05;padding-bottom: $spacing-07 * 4;}
Referencing the
spacing token table,
16px
can be set with the $spacing-05
token. The design calls for 128px
of
space below the heading and that’s not in the spacing scale. We can achieve this
in Sass by multiplying 32px ($spacing-07
) by 4. We could use 128px
or 8rem
directly in our styling, but using our tokens preserves consistency should the
token values get updated in the future.
Looking at the design, we need a wall-to-wall light gray background behind the
banner and also behind the third row. This is a great opportunity to use a Sass
mixin. We could put this at the top of _landing-page.scss
, but it’s best
practice to place mixins in a dedicated file, so create a _mixins.scss
file in
src/content/LandingPage
.
Add the following in _mixins.scss
. Per the design we need to use Gray 10 for
our banner background color, which can be set with the $ui-01
color token. Also,
we want the background to extend into the grid’s outermost gutters to go the
full width of the viewport, so given the DOM structure, we can achieve that by
setting the background in an absolutely positioned pseudo element.
src/content/LandingPage/_mixins.scss@mixin landing-page-background() {background-color: $ui-01;position: relative;&::before {content: '';position: absolute;left: -$spacing-06;top: 0;
After you have created _mixins.scss
, import it at the top of
_landing-page.scss
. By now you should have two imports:
src/content/LandingPage/_landing-page.scss@import './mixins.scss';@import './overrides.scss';
Now to use the new mixin, update the .landing-page__banner
declaration block
to:
src/content/LandingPage/_landing-page.scss.landing-page__banner {padding-top: $spacing-05;padding-bottom: $spacing-07 * 4;@include landing-page-background;}
Next, we can see that the h1
is using the heading-05
type token.
The Sketch symbol naming is consistent with the development Sass tokens to help
translate design to development. So, looking up the
type token,
we know to use productive-heading-05
:
src/content/LandingPage/_landing-page.scss.landing-page__heading {@include carbon--type-style('productive-heading-05');}
Row two
For our second row, we need to fix the tabs vertical positioning to match the
design. By inspecting the tabs component, you can see that the tab height
computes to 40px
. We can use that to create our negative top margin in rem
units.
src/content/LandingPage/_landing-page.scss.landing-page__r2 {margin-top: rem(-40px);}
We also need to adjust our vertical spacing and type treatment. Like before, it’s a matter of using spacing and type tokens like so:
src/content/LandingPage/_landing-page.scss.landing-page__tab-content {padding-top: $spacing-10;padding-bottom: $spacing-10;}.landing-page__subheading {@include carbon--type-style('productive-heading-03');@include carbon--font-weight('semibold');}
Row three
Let’s also add some styles for the last row, even though that will get used
later in the tutorial. You’ll notice that we get to re-use the
landing-page-background
mixin that we just created.
src/content/LandingPage/_landing-page.scss.landing-page__r3 {padding-top: $spacing-09;padding-bottom: $spacing-09;@include landing-page-background;}.landing-page__label {@include carbon--type-style('heading-01');}
Ta-da! You should see a finished landing page! Now we can move on to the repo page.
Add repo page grid
Now in our RepoPage.js
we’ll add our grid containers in the return
section.
src/content/RepoPage/RepoPage.jsreturn (<div className="bx--grid bx--grid--full-width bx--grid--no-gutter repo-page"><div className="bx--row repo-page__r1"><div className="bx--col-lg-16">Data table will go here</div></div></div>);
Build repo page
We currently have RepoPage.js
that just contains a grid and placeholder
content for the time being. In the next tutorial step we’re going to be querying
an API to populate the DataTable
component in this page. As a best practice to
separate data fetching from the presentation components, go ahead and create a
RepoTable.js
as a sibling to RepoPage.js
in src/content/RepoPage
.
Build data table
First, we’ll add our data table by importing a few components in RepoTable.js
:
src/content/RepoPage/RepoTable.jsimport React from 'react';import {DataTable,TableContainer,Table,TableHead,TableRow,TableExpandHeader,TableHeader,
Then, let’s create the RepoTable
component and export it at the very bottom of
RepoTable.js
.
src/content/RepoPage/RepoTable.jsconst RepoTable = ({ rows, headers }) => {return (<DataTablerows={rows}headers={headers}render={({rows,headers,getHeaderProps,
This component uses two props, rows
and headers
, and returns a Carbon
DataTable
. As for where the various Table*
components came from? The
DataTable story
in Storybook was used to put together the data table structure.
At this point, return to RepoPage.js
because now we need to render a static
RepoTable
.
Render data table
Import RepoTable
in RepoPage.js
.
src/content/RepoPage/RepoPage.jsimport RepoTable from './RepoTable';
Then below the imports, include the following arrays to pass into the
RepoTable
component. We’ll be setting the rows
array from an API in the next
tutorial step, but for now, static example rows will suffice.
src/content/RepoPage/RepoPage.jsconst headers = [{key: 'name',header: 'Name',},{key: 'createdAt',header: 'Created',},
Lastly in RepoPage.js
, we need to simply replace Data table will go here
with:
src/content/RepoPage/RepoPage.js<RepoTable headers={headers} rows={rows} />
Style repo page
Our styles for the repo page are mostly fine. We just need to update a few vertical spacing issues.
In _repo-page.scss
, add the following styles:
src/content/RepoPage/_repo-page.scss.repo-page .bx--row {padding-top: $spacing-05;padding-bottom: $spacing-05;}
Congratulations! We’ve now created our static repo page!
Submit pull request
We’re going to submit a pull request to verify completion of this tutorial step.
Continuous integration (CI) check
Run the CI check to make sure we’re all set to submit a pull request.
yarn ci-check
Git commit and push
Before we can create a pull request, stage and commit all of your changes:
git add --all && git commit -m "feat(tutorial): complete step 2"
Then, push to your repository:
git push origin react-step-2
Pull request (PR)
Finally, visit
carbon-tutorial to
“Compare & pull request”. In doing so, make sure that you are comparing to
react-step-2
into base: react-step-2
.