Storybook
Storybook is a development environment for UI components. It allows you to browse a component library, view the different states of each component, and interactively develop and test components.
This guide will briefly walk you through using Storybook within an Nx workspace.
Setting Up Storybook
Add the Storybook plugin
yarn add --dev @nrwl/storybook
Using Storybook
Generating Storybook Configuration
You can generate Storybook configuration for an individual project with this command:
nx g @nrwl/angular:storybook-configuration project-name
Running Storybook
Serve Storybook using this command:
nx run project-name:storybook
Anatomy of the Storybook setup
When running the Nx Storybook generator, it'll configure the Nx workspace to be able to run Storybook seamlessly. It'll create
- a global Storybook configuration
- a project specific Storybook configuration
The global Storybook configuration allows to set addon-ons or custom webpack configuration at a global level that applies to all Storybook's within the Nx workspace. You can find that folder at .storybook/
at the root of the workspace.
<workspace name>/
├── .storybook/
│ ├── main.js
│ ├── tsconfig.json
├── apps/
├── libs/
├── nx.json
├── package.json
├── README.md
└── etc...
The project-specific Storybook configuration is pretty much similar to what you would have for a non-Nx setup of Storybook. There's a .storybook
folder within the project root folder.
<project root>/
├── .storybook/
│ ├── main.js
│ ├── preview.js
│ ├── tsconfig.json
├── src/
├── README.md
├── tsconfig.json
└── etc...
Using Addons
To register a Storybook addon for all storybook instances in your workspace:
-
In
/.storybook/main.js
, in theaddons
array of themodule.exports
object, add the new addon:1module.exports = { 2stories: [...], 3..., 4addons: [..., '@storybook/addon-essentials'], 5};
-
If a decorator is required, in each project's
<project-path>/.storybook/preview.js
, you can export an array calleddecorators
.1import someDecorator from 'some-storybook-addon'; 2export const decorators = [someDecorator];
-- OR --
To register an addon for a single storybook instance, go to that project's .storybook
folder:
-
In
main.js
, in theaddons
array of themodule.exports
object, add the new addon:1module.exports = { 2stories: [...], 3..., 4addons: [..., '@storybook/addon-essentials'], 5};
-
If a decorator is required, in
preview.js
you can export an array calleddecorators
.1import someDecorator from 'some-storybook-addon'; 2export const decorators = [someDecorator];
Auto-generate Stories
The @nrwl/angular:storybook-configuration
generator has the option to automatically generate *.stories.ts
files for each component declared in the library.
<some-folder>/
├── my.component.ts
└── my.component.stories.ts
You can re-run it at a later point using the following command:
nx g @nrwl/angular:stories <project-name>
Cypress tests for Stories
Both storybook-configuration
generator gives the option to set up an e2e Cypress app that is configured to run against the project's Storybook instance.
To launch Storybook and run the Cypress tests against the iframe inside of Storybook:
nx run project-name-e2e:e2e
The url that Cypress points to should look like this:
'/iframe.html?id=buttoncomponent--primary&args=text:Click+me!;padding;style:default'
buttoncomponent
is a lowercase version of theTitle
in the*.stories.ts
file.primary
is the name of an individual story.style=default
sets thestyle
arg to a value ofdefault
.
Changing args in the url query parameters allows your Cypress tests to test different configurations of your component. You can read the documentation for more information.
Example Files
*.component.stories.ts file
1import { moduleMetadata, Story, Meta } from '@storybook/angular';
2import { ButtonComponent } from './button.component';
3
4export default {
5 title: 'ButtonComponent',
6 component: ButtonComponent,
7 decorators: [
8 moduleMetadata({
9 imports: [],
10 }),
11 ],
12} as Meta<ButtonComponent>;
13
14const Template: Story<ButtonComponent> = (args: ButtonComponent) => ({
15 props: args,
16});
17
18export const Primary = Template.bind({});
19Primary.args = {
20 text: 'Click me!',
21 padding: 0,
22 style: 'default',
23};
Cypress *.spec.ts file
1describe('shared-ui', () => {
2 beforeEach(() =>
3 cy.visit(
4 '/iframe.html?id=buttoncomponent--primary&args=text:Click+me!;padding;style:default'
5 )
6 );
7
8 it('should render the component', () => {
9 cy.get('storybook-trial-button').should('exist');
10 });
11});
Setting up projectBuildConfig
Storybook for Angular needs a default project specified in order to run. The reason is that it uses that default project to read the build configuration from (paths to files to include in the build, and other configurations/settings). In Nx workspaces, that project is specified with the projectBuildConfig
property.
If you're using Nx version >=13.4.6
either in a new Nx workspace, or you migrated your older Nx workspace to Nx version >=13.4.6
, Nx will automatically add the projectBuildConfig
property in your projects project.json
files, for projects that are using Storybook. It will look like this:
1 "storybook": {
2 "executor": "@nrwl/storybook:storybook",
3 "options": {
4 ...
5 "projectBuildConfig": "my-project:build-storybook"
6 },
7 ...
8 },
9 "build-storybook": {
10 "executor": "@nrwl/storybook:build",
11 ...
12 "options": {
13 ...
14 "projectBuildConfig": "my-project:build-storybook"
15 },
16 ...
17 }
This setup instructs Nx to use the configuration under the build-storybook
target of my-project
when using the storybook
and build-storybook
executors.
If the projectBuildConfig
is not set in your project.json
, you can manually set it up in one of the following ways:
Adding the projectBuildConfig
option directly in the project's project.json
In your project's project.json
file find the storybook
and build-storybook
targets. Add the projectBuildConfig
property under the options
as shown above.
After you add this property, you can run your storybook
and build-storybook
executors as normal:
nx storybook my-project
and
nx build-storybook my-project
Using the projectBuildConfig
flag on the executors
The way you would run your storybook
and your build-storybook
executors would be:
nx storybook my-project --projectBuildConfig=my-project:build-storybook
and
nx build-storybook my-project --projectBuildConfig=my-project:build-storybook
Note: If your project is buildable (eg. any project that has a build
target set up in its project.json
) you can also do nx storybook my-project --projectBuildConfig=my-project
.
In a pure Angular/Storybook setup (not an Nx workspace), the Angular application/project would have an
angular.json
file. That file would have a property calleddefaultProject
. In an Nx workspace thedefaultProject
property would be specified in thenx.json
file. Previously, Nx would try to resolve thedefaultProject
of the workspace, and use the build configuration of that project. In most cases, thedefaultProject
's build configuration would not work for some other project set up with Storybook, since there would most probably be mismatches in paths or other project-specific options.
More Documentation
For more on using Storybook, see the official Storybook documentation.
Migration Scenarios
Here's more information on common migration scenarios for Storybook with Nx. For Storybook specific migrations that are not automatically handled by Nx please refer to the official Storybook page