woocommerce/plugins/woocommerce-blocks/docs/contributors/coding-guidelines.md

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# Coding Guidelines <!-- omit in toc -->
## Table of contents <!-- omit in toc -->
- [CSS Class Names](#css-class-names)
- [Prefixing](#prefixing)
- [Naming](#naming)
- [RTL Styles](#rtl-styles)
- [SCSS File Naming Conventions for Blocks](#scss-file-naming-conventions-for-blocks)
- [Accessible font sizes](#accessible-font-sizes)
- [CSS specificity wars with 3rd party themes](#css-specificity-wars-with-3rd-party-themes)
This living document serves to prescribe coding guidelines specific to the WooCommerce Blocks project. Base coding guidelines follow the [WordPress Coding Standards](https://make.wordpress.org/core/handbook/best-practices/coding-standards/) and [Gutenberg coding standards](https://developer.wordpress.org/block-editor/contributors/develop/coding-guidelines/). The following sections outline additional patterns and conventions used in the Blocks project.
## CSS Class Names
To avoid class name collisions, class names must adhere to the following guidelines, based on the [BEM methodology](https://en.bem.info/methodology/) and [Gutenberg coding standards](https://developer.wordpress.org/block-editor/contributors/develop/coding-guidelines/).
### Prefixing
As a WordPress plugin, Blocks has to play nicely with other plugins and themes, and WordPress itself. To minimize potential conflicts, all classes should be prefixed with `.wc-block-`.
### Naming
All class names assigned to an element must be prefixed. We use different prefixes to differentiate frontend and editor elements as well as identifying if they are components or not:
- `wc-block` for classes applied to a single block.
- `wc-block-components` for classes applied to a component, which might be used by several blocks.
- `wc-block-editor` for classes applied to a single block but only used in the editor UI.
- `wc-block-editor-components` for classes applied to an editor component.
As a rule of thumb, this is the relation between location in the source tree and class name used:
| Location in the tree | Class names used | Can be styled by themes? |
| --------------------------- | ------------------------------ | :----------------------: |
| assets/js/atomic/blocks | `.wc-block-components-` | ✓ |
| assets/js/base/components | `.wc-block-components-` | ✓ |
| assets/js/blocks | Frontend: `.wc-block-` | ✓ |
| assets/js/blocks | Editor: `.wc-block-editor-` | ✘ |
| assets/js/editor-components | `.wc-block-editor-components-` | ✘ |
After the prefix, class names are built using BEM:
A **root element** (or **Block** in BEM notation) is a standalone entity that is meaningful on its own. Whilst they can be nested and interact with each other, semantically they remain equal; there is no precedence or hierarchy.
Example: `wc-block-directory-name`
Any descendant of the component's root element must append a dash-delimited descriptor, separated from the base by two consecutive underscores `__`.
A **child element** (or **Element** in BEM notation) has no standalone meaning and is semantically tied to its block.
Example: `wc-block-directory-name__descriptor-foo-bar`
Finally, A **modifier** is a flag on an element which can be used to change appearance, behavior or state.
Example: `wc-block-directory-name__descriptor-foo-bar--state`
The **root element** is considered to be the highest ancestor element returned by the default export in the index.js. Notably, if your folder contains multiple files, each with their own default exported component, only the element rendered by that of index.js can be considered the root. All others should be treated as **descendants**.
Naming is not strictly tied to the DOM so it **doesnt matter how many nested levels deep a descendant element is**. The naming convention is there to help you identify relationships with the root element.
**Nesting Example:**
- `wc-block-components-dropdown-selector` (Root Element/BEM Block)
- ├── `wc-block-components-dropdown-selector__input` (Child Element/BEM Element)
- ├── `wc-block-components-dropdown-selector__input--hidden` (Modifier)
- └── `wc-block-components-dropdown-selector__placeholder` (Child Element/BEM Element)
## RTL Styles
Upgrade webpack to version 5 (https://github.com/woocommerce/woocommerce-blocks/pull/8013) * Upgrade terser-webpack-plugin to version 4.2.3 * Upgrade webpack-bundle-analyzer to 4.7.0 * Upgrade to Webpack version 5 * Upgrade @wordpress/dependency-extraction-webpack-plugin to 4.6.0 * Upgrade dependency copy-webpack-plugin to version 11.0.0 * Upgrade dependency terser-webpack-plugin to version 5.3.6 * Replace webpack-rtl-plugin with the new @automattic/webpack-rtl-plugin * Replace module.issuer with the new ModuleGraph API There is a warning appearing in the console when running the application. This is due to the fact that the module.issuer has been deprecated on Webpack 5 and replaced with the new ModuleGraph API. This commit replaces the deprecated API with the new one. * Upgrade babel and babel plugins to latest version * Replace jsonpFunction with the new uniqueName property Add a unique name of the webpack build to avoid multiple webpack runtimes to conflict when using globals. It defaults to output.library name or the package name from package.json in the context, if both aren't found, it is set to an ''. * Replace cacheDirectory inline configuration with options.cacheDirectory * Upgrade @wordpress/e2e-tests dependency to version 5.6.0 * Remove babel-plugin-transform-react-jsx dependency Remove babel-plugin-transform-react-jsx dependency because it is already included in @wordpress/babel-preset-default * Remove unnecessary Babel dependencies Remove some unnecessary babel dependencies that are already included in the @babel/preset-env package. * Upgrade puppeteer dependency to version 16.2.0 * Remove caret from package.json dependencies * Fix Storybook build error This commit fixes the Storybook build error that was being caused because of Storybook by default uses Webpack 4, but since we are currently upgrading our webpack to version 5, we need to install some required dependencies and also explicitly tell Storybook to use Webpack 5. * Fix package-lock.json after merging with trunk * Add own webpack-rtl-plugin implementation to the project Before upgrading Webpack to version 5, we were using the original `webpack-rtl-plugin` released by Romain Berger; unfortunately, this plugin is not compatible with Webpack 5, so we replaced it with `@automattic/webpack-rtl-plugin`. The problem is that `@automattic/webpack-rtl-plugin` by default generates files with the '.rtl.css' suffix and does not provide a way to change that. This commit adds our own implementation of the `webpack-rtl-plugin` (adapted from `@automattic/webpack-rtl-plugin`) that is compatible with Webpack 5 and allows us to change the suffix of the generated files to follow the recommended way defined by Wordpress (https://codex.wordpress.org/Right-to-Left_Language_Support) * Change conditional clause to be multiline * Fix package-lock.json after merge with trunk * Fix package-lock.json after merge with trunk * Rename files to fix ESLint errors This commit renames files that have the .js extension but contain JSX code. This is causing ESLint to throw errors because by default our Eslint configuration expects only files with the .jsx extension to contain JSX code. * Fix package-lock.json file * Add is-plain-obj module to the transformIgnorePatterns of jest config * Update package-lock.json * Fix package-lock.json * Upgrade @wordpress/i18n dependency to version 4.31.0 * Update package-lock.json * Update composer lock file * Fix Webpack config for Webpack 5 * Add the package-lock.json * Remove unsupported config from webpack * Fix error with Webpack build * Add wait for network idle to the tests * Attempt to fix e2e test * Restore promise.all * Upgrade puppeteer to v17.1.3 * Upgrade expect-puppeteer * Update expect-puppeteer * Downgrade expect-puppeteer * Revert "Upgrade puppeteer to v17.1.3" This reverts commit 61ed52a56f131961f3970b6fb22cdd8b540bada3. * Upgrade Puppeteer to version 17.1.3 * Fix executionContext.frame is not a function error * Fix e2e tests * Remove isExperimentalBuild from Product Gallery inner blocks * Upgrade Webpack and Webpack-cli to latest version * Upgrade postcss and mini-css plugins * Fix error with mini-cart block * Fix styling error with filter blocks * Fix issue when running unit tests * Fix storybook script not loading * Fix a11y issue in Storybook * Fix error when multiple isExperimentalBuild was being used * Prevent error when layout is not present in the attributes object * Update `chunkIds` to `named` in Webpack * Add cache groups to the Webpack configs
2023-09-20 20:31:52 +00:00
Blocks uses the `@automattic/webpack-rtl-plugin` package to generate styles for Right-to-Left languages. These are generated automatically.
To make adjustments to the generated RTL styles, for example, excluding certain rules from the RTL stylesheets, you should use the [control directives here](https://rtlcss.com/learn/usage-guide/control-directives/index.html).
For example, you can exclude individual lines:
```css
.code {
/*rtl:ignore*/
direction: ltr;
/*rtl:ignore*/
text-align: left;
}
```
Or exclude blocks of CSS:
```css
.code {
/*rtl:begin:ignore*/
direction: ltr;
text-align: left;
/*rtl:end:ignore*/
}
```
## SCSS File Naming Conventions for Blocks
The build process will split SCSS from within the blocks library directory into two separate CSS files when Webpack runs.
Styles placed in a `style.scss` file will be built into `build/style.css`, to load on the front end theme as well as in the editor. If you need additional styles specific to the block's display in the editor, add them to an `editor.scss`.
## Accessible font sizes
Font sizes must be defined using the `font-size()` mixin, it takes a named size (`smaller`, `small`, `regular`, `large`. `larger`) and returns a font-size declaration in `em` units. This provides a consistent set of font sizes to be used across blocks, and by using `em` it increases the likelihood that blocks are accessible and fit better within different themes.
In parallel to that, consider whether other size/distance units in your CSS need to be em instead of px. In general, em should be preferred if it doesn't break the layout with big font sizes. There is another mixin named `em()` that helps converting px units to em (given a px size and optionally a base size).
## CSS specificity wars with 3rd party themes
We want our blocks to look good with as many themes as possible out of the box. Sometimes our styles will conflict with theme styles that have higher specificity. In these cases it may be tempting to increase the specificity of selectors, but increasing them too much makes it harder for other themes to style our blocks.
The following guidelines should help you decide _when_ to increase specificity, if at all. They are not hard rules so feel free to apply your best judgement on a case-by-case basis.
Imagine we are styling the radio control input but our styles are conflicting with some themes. For example, two themes that have the following styles:
Theme A:
```css
input[type='radio'] {
// specificity 0, 1, 1
background: red;
}
```
Theme B:
```css
input[type='radio']:checked {
// specificity 0, 2, 1
background: blue;
}
```
And these are the styles of the block:
```css
.wc-block-components-radio-control__input {
// specificity 0, 1, 0
background: #fff;
}
```
As you can see, the styles coming from the themes have higher specificity, so our styles would be overridden. In order to solve this:
1. Never use `!important` rules in CSS to engage in a specificity war with a theme.
2. Never use ID selectors.
3. Try wrapping the entire component/block CSS with the root class name of that component, for example:
```css
.wc-block-components-radio-control {
.wc-block-components-radio-control__input {
// specificity 0, 2, 0, we win theme A!
background: #fff;
}
}
```
4. Try adding an extra css class (or tag selector) to increase specificity. When doing so, add a comment explaining it.
```css
.wc-block-components-radio-control {
// Extra class for specificity.
.wc-block-components-radio-control__option
.wc-block-components-radio-control__input {
// specificity 0, 3, 0, we win theme B!
background: #fff;
}
}
```
5. If these steps weren't enough, consider not increasing specificity at all. If it's just a minor visual issue, consider ignoring it and assume the theme will update its conflicting styles at some point. If it's completely breaking the block or component in that theme, consider sending feedback to theme authors so they can fix it on their side.
Notice in the worst case scenario we would have increased selector specificity by 2 classes (0, 2, 0). That shouldn't make it too difficult for other themes to write styles on top of ours.
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