element-web/packages/shared-components
ElementRobot 2f7c92c70d
[create-pull-request] automated change (#32676)
Co-authored-by: t3chguy <2403652+t3chguy@users.noreply.github.com>
2026-03-02 06:42:01 +00:00
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2026-02-24 21:27:03 +00:00

@element-hq/web-shared-components

Online storybook

Shared React components library for Element Web, Aurora, Element modules... This package provides opinionated UI components built on top of the Compound Design System and Compound Web. This is not a design system by itself, but rather a set of larger components.

Installation in a new project

When adding this library to a new project, as well as installing @element-hq/web-shared-components as normal, you will also need to add compound-web as a peer dependency:

pnpm add @element-hq/web-shared-components
pnpm add @vector-im/compound-web

(This avoids problems where we end up with different versions of compound-web in the top-level project and web-shared-components).

Usage

Basic Import

Both JavaScript and CSS can be imported as follows:

import { RoomListHeaderView, useViewModel } from "@element-hq/web-shared-components";
import "@element-hq/web-shared-components/dist/element-web-shared-components.css";

or in CSS file:

@import url("@element-hq/web-shared-components");

Using Components

There are two kinds of components in this library:

  • regular react component which doesn't follow specific pattern.
  • view component(MVVM pattern).

Tip

These components are available in the project storybook.

Regular Components

These components can be used directly by passing props. Example:

import { Flex } from "@element-hq/web-shared-components";
function MyApp() {
    return <Flex align="center" />;
}

View (MVVM) Components

These components follow the MVVM pattern. A ViewModel instance should be provided as a prop.

Here's a basic example:

import { ViewExample } from "@element-hq/web-shared-components";

function MyApp() {
    const viewModel = new ViewModelExample();
    return <ViewExample vm={viewModel} />;
}

Utilities

Internationalization

  • useI18n() - Hook for translations
  • I18nApi - Internationalization API utilities

Date & Time

  • DateUtils - Date formatting and manipulation
  • humanize - Human-readable time formatting

Formatting

  • FormattingUtils - Text and data formatting utilities
  • numbers - Number formatting utilities

Development

Prerequisites

  • Node.js >= 20.0.0
  • pnpm => 10

Setup

# Install dependencies
pnpm install

# Build the library
pnpm prepare

Running Storybook

pnpm storybook

Write components

Most components should be written as MVVM pattern view components. See existing components for examples. The exceptions are low level components that don't need a view model.

Write Storybook Stories

All components should have accompanying Storybook stories for documentation and visual testing. Stories are written in TypeScript using the Component Story Format (CSF).

Story File Structure

Place the story file next to the component with the .stories.tsx extension:

MyComponent/
├── MyComponent.tsx
├── MyComponent.module.css
└── MyComponent.stories.tsx

Regular Component Stories

For regular React components (non-MVVM), create stories by defining a meta object and story variations:

import type { Meta, StoryObj } from "@storybook/react-vite";
import { fn } from "storybook/test";
import { MyComponent } from "./MyComponent";

const meta = {
    title: "Category/MyComponent",
    component: MyComponent,
    tags: ["autodocs"],
    args: {
        // Default args for all stories
        label: "Default Label",
        onClick: fn(), // Mock function for tracking interactions
    },
} satisfies Meta<typeof MyComponent>;

export default meta;
type Story = StoryObj<typeof meta>;

// Default story uses the default args
export const Default: Story = {};

// Override specific args for variations
export const WithCustomLabel: Story = {
    args: {
        label: "Custom Label",
    },
};

export const Disabled: Story = {
    args: {
        disabled: true,
    },
};

MVVM Component Stories

For MVVM components, create a wrapper component that uses useMockedViewModel and withViewDocs:

import React, { type JSX } from "react";
import { fn } from "storybook/test";
import type { Meta, StoryObj } from "@storybook/react-vite";
import { MyComponentView, type MyComponentViewSnapshot, type MyComponentViewActions } from "./MyComponentView";
import { useMockedViewModel } from "../../viewmodel";
import { withViewDocs } from "../../../.storybook/withViewDocs";

// Combine snapshot and actions for easier typing
type MyComponentProps = MyComponentViewSnapshot & MyComponentViewActions;

// Wrapper component that creates a mocked ViewModel.
// Must be a named variable (not inline) for docgen to extract its props.
const MyComponentViewWrapperImpl = ({ onAction, ...rest }: MyComponentProps): JSX.Element => {
    const vm = useMockedViewModel(rest, {
        onAction,
    });
    return <MyComponentView vm={vm} />;
};
// withViewDocs copies the View's JSDoc description onto the wrapper for Storybook autodocs
const MyComponentViewWrapper = withViewDocs(MyComponentViewWrapperImpl, MyComponentView);

// Must use `satisfies` (not `as` or `: Meta`) to preserve type info for docgen
const meta = {
    title: "Category/MyComponentView",
    component: MyComponentViewWrapper,
    tags: ["autodocs"],
    args: {
        // Snapshot properties (state)
        title: "Default Title",
        isLoading: false,
        // Action properties (callbacks)
        onAction: fn(),
    },
} satisfies Meta<typeof MyComponentViewWrapper>;

export default meta;
type Story = StoryObj<typeof MyComponentViewWrapper>;

export const Default: Story = {};

export const Loading: Story = {
    args: {
        isLoading: true,
    },
};

Thanks to this approach, we can directly use primitives in the story arguments instead of a view model object.

Important

Three requirements must be met for snapshot field documentation to appear in Storybook's ArgTypes table:

  1. Named wrapper variable — the wrapper must be assigned to a named const (e.g. MyComponentViewWrapperImpl) before being passed to withViewDocs, so that react-docgen-typescript can extract its props.
  2. withViewDocs call — wraps the wrapper component with the original View to copy the View's JSDoc description.
  3. satisfies Meta — the meta object must use satisfies Meta<...> (not as Meta<...> or : Meta<...> =). Type assertions and annotations erase the inferred component type that docgen relies on.

Linking Figma Designs

This package uses @storybook/addon-designs to embed Figma designs directly in Storybook. This helps developers compare their implementation with the design specs.

  1. Get the Figma URL: Open your design in Figma, click "Share" → "Copy link"
  2. Add to story parameters: Include the design object in the meta's parameters
  3. Supported URL formats:
    • File links: https://www.figma.com/file/...
    • Design links: https://www.figma.com/design/...
    • Specific node: https://www.figma.com/design/...?node-id=123-456

Example with Figma integration:

const meta = {
    title: "Room List/RoomListSearchView",
    component: RoomListSearchViewWrapper,
    tags: ["autodocs"],
    args: {
        // ... your args
    },
    parameters: {
        design: {
            type: "figma",
            url: "https://www.figma.com/design/vlmt46QDdE4dgXDiyBJXqp/ER-33-Left-Panel?node-id=98-1979",
        },
    },
} satisfies Meta<typeof RoomListSearchViewWrapper>;

export default meta;

The Figma design will appear in the "Design" tab in Storybook.

Non-UI Utility Stories

For utility functions, helpers, and other non-UI exports, create documentation stories using TSX format with TypeDoc-generated markdown.

src/utils/humanize.stories.tsx

import React from "react";
import { Markdown } from "@storybook/addon-docs/blocks";

import type { Meta } from "@storybook/react-vite";
import humanizeTimeDoc from "../../typedoc/functions/humanizeTime.md?raw";

const meta = {
    title: "utils/humanize",
    parameters: {
        docs: {
            page: () => (
                <>
                    <h1>humanize</h1>
                    <Markdown>{humanizeTimeDoc}</Markdown>
                </>
            ),
        },
    },
    tags: ["autodocs", "skip-test"],
} satisfies Meta;

export default meta;

// Docs-only story - renders nothing but triggers autodocs
export const Docs = {
    render: () => null,
};

Note

Be sure to include the skip-test tag in your utility stories to prevent them from running as visual tests.

Workflow:

  1. Write TsDoc in your utility function
  2. Export the function from src/index.ts
  3. Run pnpm build:doc to generate TypeDoc markdown
  4. Create a .stories.tsx file importing the generated markdown
  5. The documentation appears automatically in Storybook

Tests

Two types of tests are available: unit tests and visual regression tests.

Unit Tests

These tests cover the logic of the components and utilities. Built with Vitest and React Testing Library.

pnpm test:unit

Visual Regression Tests

These tests ensure the UI components render correctly. Built with Storybook and run under vitest using playwright.

pnpm test:storybook:update

Each story will be rendered and a screenshot will be taken and compared to the existing baseline. If there are visual changes or AXE violation, the test will fail.

Screenshots are located in packages/shared-components/__vis__/.

Important

In case of docker issues with Playwright, see playwright EW documentation.

Translations

First see our translation guide and translation dev guide. To generate translation strings for this package, run:

pnpm i18n

Publish a new version

Two steps are required to publish a new version of this package:

  1. Bump the version in package.json following semver rules and open a PR.
  2. Once merged run the github workflow