Back to Intro to Storybook
Chapters
  • Get started
  • Simple component
  • Composite component
  • Data
  • Screens
  • Deploy
  • Visual Testing
  • Addons
  • Conclusion
  • Contribute

Assemble a composite component

Assemble a composite component out of simpler components

Last chapter, we built our first component; this chapter extends what we learned to make TaskList, a list of Tasks. Let’s combine components together and see what happens when we introduce more complexity.

Tasklist

Taskbox emphasizes pinned tasks by positioning them above default tasks. It yields two variations of TaskList you need to create stories for, default and pinned items.

default and pinned tasks

Since Task data can be sent asynchronously, we also need a loading state to render in the absence of a connection. In addition, we require an empty state for when there are no tasks.

empty and loading tasks

Get set up

A composite component isn’t much different from the basic components it contains. Create a TaskList component and an accompanying story file: src/components/TaskList.vue and src/components/TaskList.stories.js.

Start with a rough implementation of the TaskList. You’ll need to import the Task component from earlier and pass in the attributes as inputs.

Copy
src/components/TaskList.vue
<template>
  <div class="list-items">
    <template v-if="loading"> loading </template>
    <template v-else-if="isEmpty"> empty </template>
    <template v-else>
      <Task
        v-for="task in tasks"
        :key="task.id"
        :task="task"
        @archive-task="onArchiveTask"
        @pin-task="onPinTask"
      />
    </template>
  </div>
</template>

<script>
import Task from './Task.vue';
import { reactive, computed } from 'vue';

export default {
  name: 'TaskList',
  components: { Task },
  props: {
    tasks: { type: Array, required: true, default: () => [] },
    loading: { type: Boolean, default: false },
  },
  emits: ['archive-task', 'pin-task'],

  setup(props, { emit }) {
    props = reactive(props);
    return {
      isEmpty: computed(() => props.tasks.length === 0),
      /**
       * Event handler for archiving tasks
       */
      onArchiveTask(taskId) {
        emit('archive-task', taskId);
      },
      /**
       * Event handler for pinning tasks
       */
      onPinTask(taskId) {
        emit('pin-task', taskId);
      },
    };
  },
};
</script>

Next, create Tasklist’s test states in the story file.

Copy
src/components/TaskList.stories.js
import TaskList from './TaskList.vue';

import * as TaskStories from './Task.stories';

export default {
  component: TaskList,
  title: 'TaskList',
  tags: ['autodocs'],
  decorators: [() => ({ template: '<div style="margin: 3em;"><story/></div>' })],
  argTypes: {
    onPinTask: {},
    onArchiveTask: {},
  },
};

export const Default = {
  args: {
    // Shaping the stories through args composition.
    // The data was inherited from the Default story in task.stories.js.
    tasks: [
      { ...TaskStories.Default.args.task, id: '1', title: 'Task 1' },
      { ...TaskStories.Default.args.task, id: '2', title: 'Task 2' },
      { ...TaskStories.Default.args.task, id: '3', title: 'Task 3' },
      { ...TaskStories.Default.args.task, id: '4', title: 'Task 4' },
      { ...TaskStories.Default.args.task, id: '5', title: 'Task 5' },
      { ...TaskStories.Default.args.task, id: '6', title: 'Task 6' },
    ],
  },
};

export const WithPinnedTasks = {
  args: {
    // Shaping the stories through args composition.
    // Inherited data coming from the Default story.
    tasks: [
      ...Default.args.tasks.slice(0, 5),
      { id: '6', title: 'Task 6 (pinned)', state: 'TASK_PINNED' },
    ],
  },
};

export const Loading = {
  args: {
    tasks: [],
    loading: true,
  },
};

export const Empty = {
  args: {
    // Shaping the stories through args composition.
    // Inherited data coming from the Loading story.
    ...Loading.args,
    loading: false,
  },
};
💡 Decorators are a way to provide arbitrary wrappers to stories. In this case we’re using a decorator key on the default export to add some margin around the rendered component. But they can also be used to add other context to components, as we'll see later.

By importing TaskStories, we were able to compose the arguments (args for short) in our stories with minimal effort. That way, the data and actions (mocked callbacks) expected by both components are preserved.

Now check Storybook for the new TaskList stories.

Build out the states

Our component is still rough, but now we have an idea of the stories to work toward. You might be thinking that the .list-items wrapper is overly simplistic. You're right – in most cases, we wouldn’t create a new component just to add a wrapper. But the real complexity of the TaskList component is revealed in the edge cases withPinnedTasks, loading, and empty.

Copy
src/components/TaskList.vue
<template>
  <div class="list-items">
    <template v-if="loading">
+     <div v-for="n in 6" :key="n" class="loading-item">
+       <span class="glow-checkbox" />
+       <span class="glow-text">
+         <span>Loading</span> <span>cool</span> <span>state</span>
+       </span>
+     </div>
    </template>

    <div v-else-if="isEmpty" class="list-items">
+     <div class="wrapper-message">
+       <span class="icon-check" />
+       <p class="title-message">You have no tasks</p>
+       <p class="subtitle-message">Sit back and relax</p>
+     </div>
    </div>

    <template v-else>
+     <Task
+       v-for="task in tasksInOrder"
+       :key="task.id"
+       :task="task"
+       @archive-task="onArchiveTask"
+       @pin-task="onPinTask"
+     />
   </template>
  </div>
</template>

<script>
import Task from './Task.vue';
import { reactive, computed } from 'vue';

export default {
  name: 'TaskList',
  components: { Task },
  props: {
    tasks: { type: Array, required: true, default: () => [] },
    loading: { type: Boolean, default: false },
  },
  emits: ['archive-task', 'pin-task'],

  setup(props, { emit }) {
    props = reactive(props);
    return {
      isEmpty: computed(() => props.tasks.length === 0),
+     tasksInOrder:computed(()=>{
+       return [
+         ...props.tasks.filter(t => t.state === 'TASK_PINNED'),
+         ...props.tasks.filter(t => t.state !== 'TASK_PINNED'),
+       ]
+     }),
      /**
       * Event handler for archiving tasks
       */
      onArchiveTask(taskId) {
        emit('archive-task',taskId);
      },
      /**
       * Event handler for pinning tasks
       */
      onPinTask(taskId) {
        emit('pin-task', taskId);
      },
    };
  },
};
</script>

The added markup results in the following UI:

Note the position of the pinned item in the list. We want the pinned item to render at the top of the list to make it a priority for our users.

💡 Don't forget to commit your changes with git!
Keep your code in sync with this chapter. View 3221bbb on GitHub.
Is this free guide helping you? Tweet to give kudos and help other devs find it.
Next Chapter
Data
Learn how to wire in data to your UI component
✍️ Edit on GitHub – PRs welcome!
Join the community
6,536 developers and counting
WhyWhy StorybookComponent-driven UI
Open source software
Storybook

Maintained by
Chromatic
Special thanks to Netlify and CircleCI