community-group
uikit
community-group | uikit | |
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8 | - | |
1,454 | 725 | |
1.2% | - | |
4.3 | 8.5 | |
19 days ago | over 2 years ago | |
HTML | HTML | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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community-group
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Design Systems: From Atomic Design to a Global Solution
The initiative is open for contributions from individuals and is not owned by a specific company or organization. It is sponsored by various entities and supported by the community, including organizations like Open UI, W3C, and the Design Tokens Community Group.
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Six new variables features launching today
Looking ahead, we aim to support native design token interoperability, aligning with the W3C community group’s ongoing standardization efforts. One of the major pieces we’re still working on is how modes and themes work within their spec. While we could launch our version now, we prefer to wait for a unified industry consensus to avoid fragmenting the space with conflicting standards.
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The Future of CSS: Easy Light-Dark Mode Color Switching with Light-Dark()
I've done a LOT of dark mode work, to the point where I'd consider myself an expert here[1].
I'm not a fan of this. This solves one tiny aspect of the larger problem in a non-scalable way that will inevitably lead to bloat and inflexibility. It's a really a naive approach that hasn't taken into account design at scale, nor the future of where design is heading.
Typically when doing theming, you have two axes - a visual mode axis (i.e. light/dark/high contrast/colorblind modes/etc) and a theme axis (i.e. docs/sheets/slides, each with a different brand color). While this does solve an aspect of the visual mode axis, as soon as you add either a new theme or a visual accessibility mode, you'll be forced to refactor. I see that as codesmell.
I also don't think this helps support a better future of theming support. If we think about the future of theming, what we see today is a convergence of design patterns. Nearly everyone is doing theming at scale in at least roughly the same way (a semantic token layer that points to different primitive colors depending on the theme), and the differences between implementations continues to diminish over time. The convergence of patterns is a good thing - it means more code can be shared.
If you wanted to actually solve theming, what you should work for is not a constrained helper function like light-dark(), but instead a shared token schema. Today nearly every company has their own token schema and different ways of naming things in the semantic token layer. If we had a shard language here, not only would it be trivial to add light/dark theming (just redefine a few variables that are already provided for you), code could be shared between sites and inherit the theming/branding.
[1] Most recently leading Figma's dark mode stream, and currently leading their variables feature work to enable others to easily do light/dark/etc. I've consulted with 50+ enterprise tier companies on their theming. Also contributed to the W3C design token proposal for theme/mode support: https://github.com/design-tokens/community-group/issues/210. Previously worked on Jira's dark mode + a few other projects.
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My variables wishlist
I had to do some reading on the actual W3 spec here, and I think I see what you're saying about compatibility with the rest of the ecosystem. Assigning a component or instance as a variable would probably be something like using an entire function as a token, which isn't one of the supported types. (Neither is Boolean though, which Figma does support, but maybe behind the scenes that's just a numeric 0 or 1?)
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Does anyone else find variables overwhelming?
One item to call out though is the W3C draft support. Unfortunately we need to wait until they add a way to handle theming for tokens before we can implement it. We're working with them closely on this, and as soon as it's in the spec, we'll support it.
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Figma Variables!! So excited to finally launch this. AMA about our future of token support.
Discussion on github for it is here: https://github.com/design-tokens/community-group/issues/210
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Figma to create design tokens to be utilized by the FE
Hello! I don't have experience creating the tokens in Figma specifically, but there are some general best practices (erhm, let's call them suggestions, a design token standard is on its way!) you'll want to keep in mind.
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How do you keep your styling consistent?
This looks really good /u/MediocreAdeptness38! I think you have discovered design tokens here. There's a ton of exploration being done in this space, and many people are arriving at conclusions similar to yours. There isn't a standard (yet!), but there are a ton of best practices that go into architecting your design tokens.
uikit
We haven't tracked posts mentioning uikit yet.
Tracking mentions began in Dec 2020.
What are some alternatives?
style-dictionary - A build system for creating cross-platform styles.
fluentui-blazor - Microsoft Fluent UI Blazor components library. For use with ASP.NET Core Blazor applications
Awesome-Design-Tokens - A list of resources on all things to do with Design Tokens
KyberSwap - Codebase for KyberSwap that helps users convert tokens instantly and directly from their own hardware wallets, metamask and so on. No setup, No deposit, no withdrawal needed. Try it out on https://kyberswap.com or join telegram for developers https://t.me/KyberDeveloper.
storybook - Storybook is a frontend workshop for building UI components and pages in isolation. Made for UI development, testing, and documentation.
bootstrap-ui-components - Bootstrap UI Components - Free Core Version of Ayro UI, A Bootstrap HTML UI Library, with Beautiful & Essential UI Components and Minimal Design System.
citizenlab - CitizenLab is a digital democracy platform that facilitates community participation and co-creation. Participants can post ideas, contribute to discussions, or choose to vote and prioritize community projects.
coolcss - The last CSS framework I'll (hopefully) ever have to make
registry - The global index of everything you can do with Pulumi.
theme-ui - Build consistent, themeable React apps based on constraint-based design principles
open-props - CSS custom properties to help accelerate adaptive and consistent design.