Skip to content

Parser and showcase generator for JavaDoc-like comments in CSS, LESS, SASS etc.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

thybzi/styledoc

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

87 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

StyleDoc: showcase your styles

Parser and showcase generator for JavaDoc-like comments in CSS, LESS, SASS etc.
Written on Javascript, available for both browser and NodeJS usage.

Implements StyleDoc draft standard: http://usestyledoc.org
(Previously inspired with concept idea of https://github.com/Joony/styledoc/)

Syntax example

/**
 * Buttons
 * All different kind of buttons used on website pages
 * @base     button     Normal button
 * @modifier .large     Large button
 * @modifier :disabled  Button unable to be pressed
 * @modifier .large:disabled Large button disabled
 * @example  <button>Button text</button>
 */
button {
    /* styles here */
} 

You can see the full list of StyleDoc standard tags here: http://usestyledoc.org/tags (some of listed tags and features aren't supported yet, but planned for future support).

Besides normal /** docblocks, StyleDoc also supports /*! docblock format, which can be used in Stylus CSS preprocessor.

What does the tool do?

StyleDoc tool parses CSS file, extracting styledoc-blocks (like the one above) and creating showcase page based on them.

This page contains full list of documented elements and their variations, illustrated with live preview and markup example.

Live examples

All examples sources are available in examples directory of project repository.

More examples coming soon!

Quick start

First of all, you need a CSS file with some styledoc-blocks inside.

StyleDoc tool will create a showcase page based on such CSS file.
It can be created in two ways:

  1. Browser way (HTTP)
  2. NodeJS way (filesystem), including CLI usage

HTTP/browser way

In this mode, the tool generates showcase page dynamically inside a HTML file opened with browser.

All required files are loaded via HTTP requests (Ajax).

  1. Download the archive and unpack it (you only need styledoc.js and templates directory). You can also use Bower installation.
    Using js/styledoc/ directory is recommended (otherwise you'll need to reconfigure templates path).
  2. Download jQuery 1.11.1+ or 2.1.1+ (why these versions?)
    (needed only for separate showcase HTML file, no need to change version on other pages of your website)
  3. Download mustache.js
  4. Create a new HTML file with some basic markup, JS library links, and styledoc.showcaseFile() call. Something as simple as that:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
    <title>My styles demo</title>
    <meta charset="utf-8">
    <script src="js/jquery-1.11.1.js"></script>
    <script src="js/mustache.js"></script>
    <script src="js/styledoc/styledoc.js"></script>
</head>
<body>

<script>
    styledoc.showcaseFile('css/mystyle.css');
</script>

</body>
</html>

After that, just open the file with your browser (use http:// or https://, not file:///) and have fun!

CSS file path can be provided as an URL, or a path relative to current location.

Note that loading CSS file via cross-domain URL file may require a CORS header
(e.g. Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *).

For advanced configuration, see Configuration section.

Bower installation

StyleDoc is also available in Bower:

bower install styledoc

Filesystem/NodeJS way

In this mode, the tool generates showcase HTML files within the filesystem.

Browser renders these files faster, because they are "hardcoded" and not formed dynamically.

Also, if you have PhantomJS installed, you can minimize iframe loading lag and prevent page height changing (more details follow).

Required files are loaded via either filesystem or HTTP requests.

Installing

Assuming you already have NodeJS installed.

npm install styledoc

Basic usage

var styledoc = require('styledoc');
styledoc.showcaseFile('css/mystyle.css', {
    page_title: 'My presentation title'
});

CSS file path can be provided as an URL, or a path relative to current location.

The above code will create your presentation files in showcase/ directory (relative to the current directory).

You can change the output directory to any other relative path (trailing slash is optional).

var styledoc = require('styledoc');
styledoc.showcaseFile('css/mystyle.css', {
    page_title: 'My presentation title',
    output_dir: 'my/presentation/subdir/'
});

PhantomJS advantage

If you have PhantomJS installed in your system, you can use it to improve showcase generation.

It will pre-measure the height of each preview iframe item when generating them to achieve maximum rendering speed for showcase page (and also to avoid some possible client bugs).

To involve PhantomJS for showcase generation, just add one more option (use_phantomjs: true):

var styledoc = require('styledoc');
styledoc.showcaseFile('css/mystyle.css', {
    page_title: 'My presentation title',
    use_phantomjs: true
});

Advanced configuration

See Configuration section.

Windows users

StyleDoc requires JSDom module when in NodeJS mode.

JSDom installation could be a bit tricky on Windows (see corresponding section for more details).
If you are not enough lucky or patient, just use StyleDoc in HTTP/browser way.

Note that there are also some PhantomJS usage issues on Windows, but they don't prevent installing or running StyleDoc in non-PhantomJS-mode.

CLI usage

@todo rewrite the section to describe CLI usage as primary way

StyleDoc can be used as command-line interface tool.

If StyleDoc is installed globally (npm install -g styledoc), use:

styledoc input_file [options]

Otherwise, from styledoc directory, use:

./bin/styledoc input_file [options]

Where:

  • input_file is relative path or absolute URL to CSS file
  • options are one or more options as described in Configuration section.
    (Note they are named is cli-manner, e.g. preview_padding becomes --preview-padding etc)

To get more info, use:

styledoc --help

Or, from styledoc directory, use:

./bin/styledoc input_file [options]

Supported tags list

  • @section: Section number and title within showcase file
    Example: @section 2.3 Buttons
    Sections are sorted by section number
    If section title is omitted, block title or @base title is used instead
  • @base: Base CSS selector and title
    Example: @base button Normal button
    Base selector can contain element name, class or whatever.
    All modifiers and states are applied to this kind of element.
  • @modifier: CSS selector and title for modifier
    Example: @modifier .large Large sized button
    A selector that modifies @base selector by adding class(es) or/and ID or/and any other CSS modification that can by applied by creating or altering some HTML attribute(s).
    Any number of modifiers can exist within the same section.
  • @state: CSS selector and title for state
    Example: @state .active Active state of the button
    Alias: @pseudo
    A special kind of modifier that doesn't represent any valuable variation of element, but only some special state (like :checked or .active).
    All modifiers are sequentially applied within each showcase subsection, instead of creating a separate subsection.
    Any number of states can exist within the same section.
    Just like common modifiers, can only represent CSS modification applicable with HTML attributes.
  • @example: HTML code representing the usage of element
    Example: @example <button>Sample text</button>
    Aliases: @markup, @presentation, @preview
    Should contain HTML markup for CSS selector determined in @base.
    Gets altered by all modifiers and states documented, creating code for HTML markup example and also live preview.
    Can be multiline (relative indents are respected). Can begin from the next line after the tag.
  • @author: Name, email, etc. of the code block author
    Example: @author John Smith <jsmith@gmail.com>
    Multiple instances are allowed within the same section.
  • @version: Version of code block (if you need to specify it by some reason)
    Example: @version 1.4
  • @since: Code version element exists since
    Example: @since 1.1
  • @deprecated: Beginning code version and/or reasons for element deprecating
    Example: @deprecated 1.2 Use .action-button instead
    Either version or description can be omitted.
  • @see: Some reference to be mentioned
    Example: @see http://stackoverflow.com/a/428032
    Multiple instances are allowed within the same section.
  • @todo: Some matters to be improved within the code
    Example: @todo Replace sprite images with pure CSS
    Multiple instances are allowed within the same section.
  • @fixme: Some things needed to be fixed within the code
    Example: @fixme IE9 fails to draw this element correctly
    Multiple instances are allowed within the same section.

Also, first text line (e.g. with no tags) is considered to be the block title.
All text lines going after the block title are considered to be block description.
Any text lines, that go after the first tag encountered, are ignored.

See StyleDoc tag index at http://usestyledoc.org/tags/

Configuration

Set templates directory

To create a showcase, StyleDoc need a template.

It looks for this template on path set in styledoc.templates_dir property.

  • For HTTP/browser mode, default path is js/styledoc/templates/ (relative to the HTML file).
  • For FS/NodeJS mode, default path is templates/ subdir inside module directory.

You can change this default value to any URL or relative path.

styledoc.templates_dir = 'my/custom/templates/dir';
  • In HTTP/browser mode, path value is relative to the HTML file.
  • In FS/NodeJS mode, path value is relative to output directory.

@todo other configurable properties

showcaseFile() method options

Showcase options can be provided as second argument

styledoc.showcaseFile('css/mystyle.css', {
     /* options here */
});

Available options:

  • $container: (HTTP mode only) JQuery element for root showcase container
    Default value: $('body')
  • output_dir: (FS mode only) Path for creating to showcase files, relative to current location
    Default value: 'showcase/'
  • template: Name of showcase page template
    Default value: 'default'
  • language: Language to apply when creating page (should exist in template's languages directory)
    Default value: 'en'
  • doctype: Live preview target doctype (should exist in template's preview directory).
    Default value: 'html5'
  • page_title: Main title (<h1>) of showcase page
    Default value for HTTP mode: document.title
    Default value for FS mode: ''
  • css_url_http: (FS mode only) HTTP(S) path to CSS file to use in preview (detected automatically by default)
    Default value: undefined
  • iframe_delay: Delay (ms) before refreshing iframe height
    This delay is needed to render preview item iframe page, measure its height, and then apply this height to <iframe> element itself
    Also sets delay before first window resize that resizes iframes Default value: 2000
  • use_phantomjs: (FS mode only) Use PhantomJS to pre-measure and pre-set preview iframes height values (so iframe loads without additional delay)
    Requires PhantomJS to be installed in system
    Default value: false
  • phantomjs_viewport: (FS mode only) Viewport size for PhantomJS instances
    Default value: { width: 1280, height: 800 }
  • phantomjs_noweak: (FS mode only) Set to true if you expirience Error: Cannot find module 'weak' problem on Windows (details)
    Default value: false
  • silent_mode: (FS mode only) Disable console messages
    Default value: false
  • preview_padding: Padding value(s) for preview container
    Useful if elements have box-shadow, outline or similar styles that don't affect the container offset size
    Value can be a number (4 => padding: 4px) or array of numbers ([ 4, 3, 8 ] => padding: 4px 3px 8px)
    Default value: undefined
  • background_color: Background color CSS value for both main showcase page and iframe preview pages (for seemless iframes)
    Use this option if your target body color differs from value proposed by template (#fff for default template, #000 for dark template, etc.)
    Value should be a string containing any CSS-valid color value (e.g. "#f1f1f1", "darkgray", or even "rgb(17, 17, 36)")
    Default value: undefined

Creating your own template

@todo

Q & A

Can I use StyleDoc with LESS, SASS, etc.?

Yes, you can. The easiest way is just to compile it CSS, preserving CSS-style comments, and then apply StyleDoc to the resulting CSS file.

Why it is named StyleDoc? (not CSSDoc)

For now, StyleDoc actually supports only CSS docblocks. But in future it should also support docblocks for such LESS/SASS/Stylus constructs as mixins, functions etc. So, the scope of StyleDoc is broader than just CSS.

Does StyleDoc respect @import rules in CSS?

Yes, it does. The tool recursively loads and parses all imported CSS-files (as well as imports in that imported files, and so on).

Can I load CSS file by HTTP URL?

Yes, you can. Just provide an URL instead of relative path to CSS when calling styledoc.showcaseFile().
Also, if you use StyleDoc in browser mode, CORS headers are needed for getting that file.

How does live preview work?

Each element's preview is created in separate <iframe> with target CSS file linked and HTML content generated.

This approach prevents styles interference for main page and target CSS.

Also, StyleDoc tool preserves the same background color for main page and iframe live preview, so boudaries of that iframes are seemless.

Why there is a delay before live preview appears?

Previews are loaded within iframes, and it takes some time for them to render. After that, the tool needs to measure inner offset height of each preview and set this height value to the correspondent iframe element. And when this all is done, preview becomes visible.

Also, there is no reliable method for detecting the moment when rendering completes. That's why the tool sets a special delay after iframe reports it is "loaded". This delay defaults to 2000 ms, and could be changed with iframe_delay option for showcaseFile() method.

If your styles are light enough and seem to render faster, you may reduce this value, but keep in mind that some slower computers may need more time.

If the delay is too small, iframe could appear with wrong height (less or sometimes more than needed). But after you resizing page window, all iframe heights are remeasured (and probably fixed).

On the contrary, if your styles seem to be too heavy, or the computer is too slow, you can increase the value of iframe_delay.

But the best option is to use NodeJS mode with PhantomJS enabled. In this mode, PhantomJS pre-measures the height of each iframe, eliminating the necessity of additional iframe delay.

For that purpose, PhantomJS renders it within virtual "window" (size of which defaults to 1280×800, and can be overriden with phantomjs_viewport option for showcaseFile() method).

However, even these pre-measured iframe heights are also remeasured on window resize.

Why @state :hover doesn't work?

Modifiers available for showcase are limited to CSS modifications applicable by adding or altering HTML attributes. :hover or :active cannot be applied with attributes (unlike :checked, :disabled or :readonly), so they are mainly useless for showcase.
However, elements in showcase are full functional, so you can see the hover state of just by hovering the element by mouse.

I cannot install NodeJS version on Windows

StyleDoc uses two npm modules that could cause problems on Windows.

JSDom dependency

On Windows, there are some known problems when installing JSDom, which is required for NodeJS version of the tool. If you are lucky, following manuals could help (if not, you can still use StyleDoc in HTTP/browser way):

PhantomJS optional dependency

On Windows, there is also an issue when installing phantom (NodeJS library which used to communicate with PhantomJS).

However, PhantomJS usage is just an option giving you some advantages, so this dependency is marked optional, and StyleDoc installation won't fail if phantom couldn't be installed. You'll also see a warning message when generating showcase with use_phantomjs option enabled and no phantom package installed.

If you succeeded in fixing that issue, you can re-run npm install styledoc, which will try to install phantom package again.

Weak subdependency in PhantomJS

Also, even with phantom successfully installed on Windows you can still expirience problems like Error: Cannot find module 'weak'.

That can be solved by enabling phantomjs_noweak option for showcaseFile() method). More details follow here: https://github.com/sgentle/phantomjs-node#use-it-in-windows

Is there a grunt wrapper for npm module?

Yes, there is npm package grunt-styledoc that is usable for Grunt.

npm install grunt-styledoc

For configuration details and additional information, see project repo: https://github.com/thybzi/grunt-styledoc

Can StyleDoc be used as AMD module?

Yes, it is AMD-compatible.
@todo test it

Can StyleDoc be used as CommonJS module in browser?

Yes, it should work.
@todo test it

Why new version of jQuery is required?

StyleDoc requires jQuery version 1.11.1+ or 2.1.1+.
That is because showcase generator tool needs this particular change in jQuery Sizzle code:
https://github.com/jquery/sizzle/commit/ccb809ff416b06ca86abe54ce273c40f2271d3b5.
Without that, it cannot parse and apply CSS modifiers to HTML code.

I use an older version of jQuery on my website. What can I do?

  1. You can just use separate versions of jQuery for your website and showcase file.
  2. You can manually modify your jQuery file, reproducing this change:
    https://github.com/jquery/sizzle/commit/ccb809ff416b06ca86abe54ce273c40f2271d3b5;
    simplier, just find function tokenize( in jquery .js file, and add Sizzle.tokenize = tokenize; somewhere after (or before) this function.

Why npm module has such heavy dependencies?

For now, they all are needed for different reasons. I'll try to optimize these dependencies in future.

Why the code is so ugly?

For now, it just does its dirty work.

Hope that during the way from 0.0.1 to 1.0.0 it will become more neat and beautiful :)

Version history

  • 0.0.8 (2015-05-12):
    • Support for css_url_http option in FS mode to set CSS URL implicitly;
    • AMD support fixed;
    • Minor improvements and bugfixes
  • 0.0.7 (2014-12-14):
    • CLI tool for more convinient usage;
    • PhantomJS usage improvements;
    • Some improvements for Windows users;
    • Minor improvements and bugfixes
  • 0.0.6 (2014-12-01): Hotfix for missing trailing slash when parsing output dir value
  • 0.0.5 (2014-12-01):
    • Assure uniqueness of anchors and IDs on showcase page;
    • Better UX when generating showcase in NodeJS mode;
    • PhantomJS pre-measured iframes are also resized on window resize;
    • Eliminated presentation and example markup difference (@presentation tag is now just an alias of @example);
    • Minor improvements and bugfixes
  • 0.0.4 (2014-11-30): Provide $.Deferred interface for showcaseFile
    Same as 0.0.3-1
  • 0.0.3 (2014-11-30):
    • Optional dependency for phantom;
    • Support for /*! Stylus persistent ("buffered") comments;
    • Preview basic customization with preview_padding and background_color options;
    • Clickable titles (leading to their own anchors) on showcase page;
    • Bower support;
    • CommonJS-way require should now work in browser;
    • Minor improvements and bugfixes
  • 0.0.2 (2014-11-28): Examples added; minor changes, improvements and bugfixes
  • 0.0.1 (2014-11-27): Initial release

TODO / Wishlist

  • Utility for cli usage
  • Wipe redundant underscores from item IDs (and option to disable this wiping)
  • Avoid circular imports
  • PhantomJS + Windows = wrong heights?
  • More examples (different levels of configuration)
  • Option to disable adding states to presentation (and also to specified items)
  • Enable setting separate values of preview_padding for specified items
  • Option to add custom style (code/file) to presentation
  • Stick multiple docblocks together by using similar @base
  • Support for multiple @example blocks; for @base always use first example; for each modifier use first matching from other examples, or base example if none of them matches
  • Support for pattern tags used to describe nesting and siblings (% char defines @base selector position):
    • @nested .wrapper %
    • @nested .parent > %
    • @nested .parent > %.subclass
    • @wrapper .wrapper (= @nested .wrapper > %)
    • @parent .parent (= @nested .parent %)
    • @sibling .afore ~ %
    • @sibling .prev + %
    • @siblingto .afore (= @sibling .afore ~ %)
    • @nextto .prev (= @sibling .prev + %)
    • @nested .over-wrapper .parent > %
    • @sibling .afore ~ next + %.subclass
    • @pattern .over-wrapper .afore + .parent > %[rel="license"]
  • Safe and reliable way to distinct the boudaries of space-containing selectors (pattern of even base)
  • Some tags for media queries?
  • "As is" output for bypass-tags (@author, @since, @licence etc.)
  • Convert @see .base.modifier to correpondent anchor link
  • Enable processing non-CSS source files (with imports etc.)
  • Use LESS sourcemaps for additional info in presentation
  • StyleDoc syntax for mixins/functions
  • Tags wiki

About

Parser and showcase generator for JavaDoc-like comments in CSS, LESS, SASS etc.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published