React component library, which can be used to build trip planner webapps.
See:
- Examples and docs (via Storybook)
- Current npm releases
- A reference implementation of otp-ui -- IMPORTANT NOTE: otp-ui use in otp-rr is a WIP / TBD
git checkout https://github.com/opentripplanner/otp-ui.git
pnpm install
pnpm dev
You can chat with the main OTP-RR developers in our Gitter chat. Support is not guaranteed, but we may be able to answer questions and assist people wishing to make contributions.
Some packages in otp-ui depend on sibling packages (e.g., @opentripplanner/core-utils
is used by many of its siblings). Internal dependencies are handled with the workspace:*
version, which is a notation provided by pnpm. This allows us to always reference the current internal dependency version. Therefore, before the storybook can be run, it's necessary to run pnpm prepublish
so that all internal packages are built.
If the Storybook addon bar (a bar of controls at the bottom of the story) does not appear, you may need to clear localStorage by opening the browser console and typing localStorage.clear()
.
This repo utilizes the Storyshot Storybook addon to perform snapshot tests of every story in this monorepo. Whenever the script pnpm unit
is ran, the Storyshot addon will be included along with all the other tests. It will compare the initial output of every story to the saved snapshot of that story. This provides a quick way to make sure nothing drastic has changed and that every single story is able to initially render without an error. Storyshot doesn't snapshot all possible changes that can be done while interacting with story components. Often times these snapshots will need to be updated and that can be accomplished by running pnpm update-snapshots
.
A Monorepo with multiple packages and a shared build, test, and release process.
- 🐉 Lerna - The Monorepo manager
- 📦 PNPM Workspaces - Sane multi-package management
- 🚀 React - JavaScript library for user interfaces
- 💅 styled-components - CSS in JS elegance
- 🛠 Babel - Compiles next-gen JavaScript
- 📖 Storybook - UI Component Environment
- 🃏 Jest - Unit/Snapshot Testing
pnpm dev
- This starts Storybook for viewing all the components locally.pnpm install
- This installs all of the packages and links dependent packages together.pnpm preppublish
- This babelfies all of the packages and creates/lib
and/esm
folders for each one.pnpm unit
- Run jest unit tests.pnpm coverage
- Shows jest unit coverage.pnpm clean
- Deletes all files in the gitignore (note: this can delete local editor settings)pnpm pack-all
- Creates tarball packages for all non-private packages and displays their locations.npx lerna changed
- Show which packages have changed.npx lerna diff
- Show specifically what files have cause the packages to change.npx lerna create <packageName>
- Creates new package and walks through setting up package.json
This project uses semantic-release to create releases to NPM. It is expect that contributors create Conventional Commit messages. These are then parsed by semantic-release which will automatically create an appropriate release for each package whenever a branch is merged to master.
Internal package dependencies are referenced using the workspace
protocol provided by pnpm. This allows us to depend on our internal packages without keeping versions up to date, but these versions must be replaced with the actual version numbers prior to release. pnpm handles this when publishing automatically. However, if you wish to rely on an otp-ui package in a local filesystem project using the file
protocol, you need to use pnpm pack
to create a tarball of the package, then reference that tarball in the other project's package.json.
For example, to depend on core-utils locally, you can run pnpm pack
from within the packages/core-utils
. Next, in the other project, use a line like this to reference the resulting tarball. "@opentripplanner/core-utils": "file:../otp-ui/packages/core-utils/opentripplanner-core-utils-12.0.2.tgz",
The pnpm pack-all
command creates tarball packages for all non-private packages in the monorepo and displays their locations. This is useful for testing packages locally in another project.
When executed, this command runs pnpm pack
for each non-private package and outputs the path to the generated tarball file. You can then reference these tarballs directly in other projects using the file protocol in your other project's package.json.
As of Fall 2022, the otp-ui map layers have migrated from Leaflet to MapLibreGL. This migration was a breaking change, so existing uses of otp-ui should be unaffected. If you wish to migrate to the latest version, please see the Migration Guide.
We understand not all will want to upgrade to vector tiles right away, and so will be maintaining the raster tile versions of all relevant packages for the foreseeable future.
The following table lists the last major version of each package which uses raster tiles. These major versions will receive fresh minor versions as updates are needed.
Package | Latest Major Version with Raster Tiles |
---|---|
base-map |
2 |
core-utils |
7 |
endpoints-overlay |
1 |
itinerary-body |
4 |
park-and-ride-overlay |
1 |
route-viewer-overlay |
1 |
stop-viewer-overlay |
1 |
stops-overlay |
4 |
transit-vehicle-overlay |
2 |
transitive-overlay |
2 |
trip-viewer-overlay |
1 |
types |
3 |
vehicle-rental-overlay |
1 |
zoom-based-markers |
1 |
OTP-UI uses react-intl
from the formatjs
library for internationalization.
Both react-intl
and formatjs
take advantage of native internationalization features provided by web browsers.
Language-specific content is located in YML files under the i18n
folder of packages that have internationalizable content
(e.g. en-US.yml
for American English, fr.yml
for generic French, etc.).
Note: Do not add comments to these YML files! Comments are removed by yaml-sort
during pre-commit.
Instead, comments for other developers should be placed in the corresponding js/jsx/ts/tsx file.
Comments for translators should be entered into Weblate (see Contributing Translations)
To use the YML files in your react-intl application:
- Merge the content of this file into the messages object that has your other localized strings,
- Flatten the ids, i.e. convert a structure such as
into
otpUi > ItineraryBody > travelByMode > bike
otpUi.ItineraryBody.travelByMode.bike
- Pass the resulting object to the messages prop of
IntlProvider
. Seepackages/from-to-location-picker/src/index.story.tsx
for an example of how to initialize localized messages withIntlProvider
.
Access the internationalized content in code, typically using either
import { FormattedMessage } from "react-intl";
...
<FormattedMessage id="..." />
or, if you need a string
,
// Obtain `intl` using `injectIntl` or `useIntl`.
intl.formatMessage({ id: ... })
where the id passed to FormattedMessage
and intl.formatMessage
can be literal or a computed value.
See Internationalization checks and reporting for caveats.
Code and translation integrity is checked by scripts that you can run locally.
check:i18n-all
checks for all languages. check:i18n-en-fr
checks for English (US) and French and is run on GitHub after each push.
These scripts check the following:
- All entries in the applicable translation files are used in the code.
- All message ids used in the code have translations.
For the scripts to work best, you should use literal ids as much as possible with <FormattedMessage>
or intl.formatMessage
.
This is because the scripts use the formatJS
CLI, and the formatJS
CLI simply ignores message ids that are not literals.
Exceptions to the checks above can be defined when:
- Reusing a message defined in another package,
- A message id needs to be computed, with some portion of it coming from a parameter,
and implementing a
switch
case does not provide substantial benefits.
Exceptions are defined in optional files named i18n-exceptions.json
. See the scripts package README for setting these files up.
OTP-UI now uses Hosted Weblate to manage translations!
Translations from the community are welcome and very much appreciated,
please see instructions at https://hosted.weblate.org/projects/otp-react-redux/.
Community input from Weblate will appear as pull requests with changes to files in the applicable i18n
folders for our review.
(Contributions may be edited or rejected to remain in line with long-term project goals.)
If changes to a specific language file is needed but not enabled in Weblate, please open an issue or a pull request with the changes needed.