yarn install
Note
You can use yarn storybook
to view all the tokens we have available
yarn generate
yarn storybook
You should see something like this output:
==============================================
Theme: light
js
✔︎ dist/tokens-nested.es6.js
✔︎ dist/tokens-nested.d.ts
✔︎ dist/tokens.d.ts
✔︎ dist/tokens.es6.js
scss
✔︎ dist/tokens.scss
css
✔︎ dist/tokens.css
==============================================
This should have created a build directory and it should look like this:
├── dist/
│ ├── dark
│ ├── ...
│ ├── highContrast
│ ├── ...
│ ├── index.d.ts
│ ├── index.js
│ ├── theme.d.ts
│ ├── theme.es6.js
│ ├── tokens.css
│ ├── tokens.d.js
│ ├── tokens.es6.js
│ ├── tokens.scss
If you open style-dictionary/build.ts
you will see there is 1 platforms defined for web (however, we can build for android, compose, ios, and ios-swift). Each platform has a transformGroup, buildPath, and files. The buildPath and files of the platform should match up to the files what were built. The files built should look like these:
JS
// tokens.es6.js
export const TokenColorNeutrals5 = "#F7F7FA";
export const TokenColorNeutrals10 = "#EDEDF2";
export const TokenColorNeutrals20 = "#E5E5EA";
export const TokenColorNeutrals30 = "#D6D6DD";
export const TokenColorNeutrals40 = "#C2C2CA";
export const TokenColorNeutrals50 = "#A3A3AB";
export const TokenColorNeutrals60 = "#83838C";
export const TokenColorNeutrals70 = "#717178";
export const TokenColorNeutrals80 = "#5E5E65";
export const TokenColorNeutrals90 = "#4B4B51";
export const TokenColorNeutrals100 = "#3A3A3F";
JS Nested
export default {
Color: {
Neutrals: {
5: "#F7F7FA",
10: "#EDEDF2",
20: "#E5E5EA",
30: "#D6D6DD",
40: "#C2C2CA",
50: "#A3A3AB",
60: "#83838C",
70: "#717178",
80: "#5E5E65",
90: "#4B4B51",
100: "#3A3A3F"
},
}
}
SCSS
// tokens.scss
$token-color-neutrals-5: #F7F7FA;
$token-color-neutrals-10: #EDEDF2;
$token-color-neutrals-20: #E5E5EA;
$token-color-neutrals-30: #D6D6DD;
$token-color-neutrals-40: #C2C2CA;
$token-color-neutrals-50: #A3A3AB;
$token-color-neutrals-60: #83838C;
$token-color-neutrals-70: #717178;
$token-color-neutrals-80: #5E5E65;
$token-color-neutrals-90: #4B4B51;
$token-color-neutrals-100: #3A3A3F;
CSS
// tokens.css
--token-color-neutrals-5: #F7F7FA;
--token-color-neutrals-10: #EDEDF2;
--token-color-neutrals-20: #E5E5EA;
--token-color-neutrals-30: #D6D6DD;
--token-color-neutrals-40: #C2C2CA;
--token-color-neutrals-50: #A3A3AB;
--token-color-neutrals-60: #83838C;
--token-color-neutrals-70: #717178;
--token-color-neutrals-80: #5E5E65;
--token-color-neutrals-90: #4B4B51;
--token-color-neutrals-100: #3A3A3F;
This shows a few things happening:
- The build system does a deep merge of all the token JSON files defined in the
source
attribute ofstyle-dictionary/build.ts
. This allows you to split up the token JSON files however you want. - The build system resolves references to other design tokens in other files as well. For example in
tokens/alias/light.json
the value{color.neutrals.white}
gets resolved properly.
You may import each tier of tokens: Global, Alias, Component
import { Global, Alias, Component } from '@linode/design-language-system';
You may alternately access any token set under each tier:
import { Color, Interaction, Button } from '@linode/design-language-system';
You selectively import tokens by extending the path:
import { Button } from '@linode/design-language-system/components';
All of the above applies to themes:
import { Global, Alias, Component } from '@linode/design-language-system/themes/dark';