Smart React components for every app, easily customizable for every purpose.
If you still want to use older MoBrix-ui versions, check older MoBrix-ui versions guides .
(Upgrade it to v4.X.X if possible!)
Check out the official MoBrix-ui guide page for more details
This library is built upon few (but important) concepts:
- Small library size, to not impact on final app bundle size
- Few dependencies, to not introduce a bunch of additional packages (that could also introduce bugs or version conflicts with pre-existent packages)
- Let the user customize every part as desired, but with default values set otherwise, to make every component ready to be used without so many parameters
- Every component should be integrable into every react app, so their behaviour must be easily customizable too
The same concepts are also the base of another project I maintain, MoBrix-engine (check it out, it is also the base of MoBrix-ui guide page !)
This library use a standardized process to build every component. As result, every component has a shared initial logic, shared CSS styles and shared properties. Some properties are shared between all components, for a smoother dev experience. In addition, this makes every single component easily re-usable.
MoBrix-ui components shares some properties:
Parameter |
Type |
Default |
---|---|---|
string |
/ |
|
string |
/ |
|
boolean |
false |
|
boolean |
false |
|
string |
/ |
|
boolean |
true |
|
CSSProperties |
/ |
|
boolean |
false |
|
boolean |
true |
|
fade-in | slide-in-left | slide-in-right | slide-in-top | shake |
/ |
|
boolean |
true |
|
boolean |
true |
|
boolean |
false |
|
boolean |
false |
|
(keyEvent : any) => void |
/ |
|
() => void |
/ |
|
() => void |
/ |
|
Record<string, any> |
/ |
|
boolean |
true |
|
string |
/ |
|
number | string |
/ |
Check out the complete components list for more details
MoBrix-ui is globally configurable, with CSS variables. By defining some specific custom CSS variables into your app css, you'll change the UI of all components:
Css variable |
Fallback |
Default |
---|---|---|
/ |
/ |
|
linear-gradient(to right, #fff, #ededee, #e6e7e7) |
||
linear-gradient(to right, #2d3748, #1d232e) |
||
/ |
/ |
|
#e9e9e9 |
||
#1d232e |
||
/ |
/ |
|
#dfeaf8 |
||
#3a3552 |
||
/ |
/ |
|
linear-gradient(to right, #ececec, #e1e1e6, #dbdddd) |
||
linear-gradient(to right, #364257, #252d3b) |
||
/ |
/ |
|
#1b1b1b |
||
white |
||
/ |
/ |
|
#413c5c |
||
#dfeaf8 |
||
/ |
/ |
|
#464545 |
||
#464545 |
||
/ |
/ |
|
#7785ff |
||
#fb7a10 |
Check out the complete components list for more details
Some components are designed with a specific structure, to sync their internal state with an external input value. This kind of component handle internally their actual value, using the value
parameter as starting point. This let the component to be driven in 2 different way:
-
Internally, Its internal
value
, when using the component without changing its value parameter from code -
External, passing the
value
parameter
So, we have 2 scenarios:
-
If you change the component value using the component (without changing the
value
parameter), it will be updated internally. -
If you change the passed
value
parameter, the component will sync its value with the given one.
A clear example is the Input component. When changing the value
parameter, the component will sync its actual value.
If you want to use this library inside your project, just install it:
npm i mobrix-ui
After installation, you can use every MoBrix-ui
component in your app. Run this example to see them in action:
import { Card, Container, Link } from "mobrix-ui";
import { render } from "react-dom";
render(
<Container animated>
<Card
dark={true}
body={<p>This page is entirely made with MoBrix-ui components !</p>}
footer={
<Link to="https://cianciarusocataldo.github.io/mobrix-ui">
MoBrix-ui page
</Link>
}
/>
</Container>,
document.getElementById("root"),
);
If you want to customize the UI globally, initialize the dedicated CSS variables:
* {
--mbx-text: #f5f5f5;
--mbx-background-color: #1b1b1b;
--mbx-container-background: green;
--mbx-card-background: orange;
}
Unit tests for every component are located inside tests
folder. The test script is executed with pre-defined test command:
npm run test
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details