Skip to content

texastribune/queso-ui

Repository files navigation

@texastribune/queso-ui

Centralizing styles for product development at The Texas Tribune

This repo contains a library of styles and icons available to import via npm.

Along with the library, we set up a few tools that help document updates. CSS comments are parsed to create a JSON object of documentation. That data is rendered with nunjucks to give us a visual representation of the various components and rule-sets we're building.

Our goal is that as we iterate upon the design of our products, we document everything along the way. This keeps our style docs current and allows for continuous optimization our CSS.

We named it "queso" because we wanted a Texas-esque name and an easy way to refer to it internally. Also as we all know, everything is better with queso 🧀.

Getting started

1. Add the assets as a dependency

npm install @texastribune/queso-ui --save-dev

2. Create an imports file

You'll rarely need all of the components or layouts so just take what you need for your project and override as you please.

Example:

// styles.scss

@import '@texastribune/queso-ui/assets/scss/1-settings/all';
// Optional: Add overrides to queso SCSS variables or new variables here
// @import 'settings/all';
// @import 'settings/my-custom-vars';

@import '@texastribune/queso-ui/assets/scss/2-tools/all';
@import '@texastribune/queso-ui/assets/scss/3-resets/all';
@import '@texastribune/queso-ui/assets/scss/4-elements/all';
@import '@texastribune/queso-ui/assets/scss/5-typography/all';

// components
@import '@texastribune/queso-ui/assets/scss/6-components/icon/icon';
@import '@texastribune/queso-ui/assets/scss/6-components/navbar/navbar';
@import '@texastribune/queso-ui/assets/scss/6-components/site-footer/site-footer';

// Optional: Add overrides to queso components or new components here
// @import 'components/navbar';
// @import 'components/site-footer';
// @import 'components/my-custom-component';

// layout
@import '@texastribune/queso-ui/assets/scss/7-layout/align';
@import '@texastribune/queso-ui/assets/scss/7-layout/container';
@import '@texastribune/queso-ui/assets/scss/7-layout/content-grid';
@import '@texastribune/queso-ui/assets/scss/7-layout/display';
@import '@texastribune/queso-ui/assets/scss/7-layout/width';

// utilities
@import '@texastribune/queso-ui/assets/scss/utilities/all';

Note: You may need to adjust the paths on the @imports to something like @import 'node_modules/@texastribune/queso-ui/assets/scss/1-settings/all';

3. Compile SCSS into CSS

In many projects, we use queso-tools to handle compiling assets.

Alternatively, dart-sass is a great, low-dependency compiler.


Contributing to this CSS Framework