This project contains the JavaScript and styles to add an "All Canonical" navigation dropdown item to the Vanilla navigation pattern.
The dropdown contains a list of Canonical eco-system websites, giving a user the ability to jump around the core sites easily.
Use a node package manager to install this component and then link the JS file into the head of your site, with optional settings.
The styles will automatically be injected into the page's <head>
.
- Install via yarn or npm
yarn add @canonical/global-nav
...or...
npm install @canonical/global-nav --save
- You can then install the library either by directly linking to it or via ES6 imports.
To consume the library directly, add a link to the JS file containing an IIFE and run the canonicalGlobalNav.createNav()
function;
<script src="/node_modules/@canonical/global-nav/dist/iife.js"></script>
<script>
canonicalGlobalNav.createNav();
</script>
To import it, simply call it from your site-wide JS file;
import { createNav } from '@canonical/global-nav';
createNav();
- You will then need to add the
.global-nav
class to aul.p-navigation__items
element within the navigation pattern. The module will look for this class and add the dropdown as the first item in the list.
The createNav
function takes an object of options with the following property:
breakpoint
: The point, in pixels, at which the navigation switches between desktop and mobile layouts. The default is620px
, which is meant to reflect the default value of$breakpoint-navigation-threshold
in Vanilla (see Vanilla's breakpoint documentation).
If the $breakpoint-navigation-threshold
Vanilla variable is overridden in your project, you will need to set this option on the global nav.
For example, to set the breakpoint
to 1036
:
<script src="/node_modules/@canonical/global-nav/dist/index.js"></script>
<script>
canonicalGlobalNav.createNav({ breakpoint: 1036 });
</script>
If you're importing;
import { createNav } from '@canonical/global-nav';
createNav({ breakpoint: 1036 });
To build the JS into the /dist
folder, run:
./run build
The simplest way to run the site locally is to first install Docker (on Linux you may need to add your user to the docker
group), and then use the ./run
script:
./run
You can also use the dotrun snap, by running:
dotrun
Once the containers are setup, you can visit http://127.0.0.1:8300 in your browser.
For working on Sass files and JS files , you may want to dynamically watch for changes to rebuild the dist files whenever something changes.
To setup the watcher, open a new terminal window and run:
./run watch
Before submitting your pull request, run the tests - which checks both the JS and Sass for errors.
./run test
Just because this was a bit of a pain, here is what I did.
- Shrink the svg as much as possible
- Upload it to the asset server for others - OPTIONAL
- View it in a browser and grab the source code.
- Convert the quotes from double
"
to single'
- CRITICAL - Encode the svg
- Add this with
data:image/svg+xml,
in the right place in product-details.js
The package is versioned using semantic versioning and published to the NPM registry.
To cut a new release run:
npm version [patch|minor|major]
This will trigger the prepublishonly
script which will ensure requisite artefacts are built before publishing.
Code licensed LGPLv3 by Canonical Ltd.
With ♥ from Canonical