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Contributing to Backpack

You want to help us enable Skyscanner to create beautiful, coherent products at scale? That's awesome! ❤️

Table of contents

Prerequisites

Licence

By contributing your code, you agree to license your contribution under the terms of the APLv2.

All files are released with the Apache 2.0 licence.

If you are adding a new file it should have a header comment containing licence information from the following file: license.

Environment

Backpack is developed using Node. The required Node version is specified in .nvmrc.

If you use nvm or nave to manage your Node environment, Backpack has built-in support for these. Just run nvm use or nave auto to install the correct Node version.

To install npm, use npm install --global npm@^<version>. For example, npm install --global npm@^9.5.1.

Code style

Backpack uses a combination of ESLint and Prettier to enforce coding styles. ESLint runs as a pre-commit hook, so it isn't possible to commit code that causes ESLint to fail.

We recommend that you install a plugin to your editor to run ESLint automatically, which will then show you any errors inline. You can even enable an option to fix ESLint errors automatically upon saving.

Android, iOS and React Native

Backpack also supports React Native, plus native Android and iOS.

They can be found at backpack-android and backpack-ios and backpack-react-native

Getting started

Once you have a compatible environment as stated above, you can setup the project.

  1. Pull the code and create a new branch
git clone https://github.com/YOUR_USERNAME/Backpack.git
git checkout -b {BRANCH_NAME}
  1. Install npm dependencies
npm install --registry="https://registry.npmjs.org/"
  1. Build a modern version of mixins for local development
npm run build:unstable__bpk-mixins
  1. Build SVGs
npm run build
  1. Start the Storybook server, then go to http://localhost:9001 in a web browser to view it
npm start

Write your code

Before you start writing code, we recommend familiarising yourself with the engineering conventions and squad decisions which are kept in the decisions folder. You should also check out the start guidance at skyscanner.design

React components

TypeScript

All Backpack components are written in Typescript or are being gradually migrated to Typescript.

As we're in the process of migrating all Backpack components to Typescript, we kindly request that engineers contributing changes to an existing component also migrate the respective component to TypeScript.

We also ship the type declaration files for all TypeScript components to ensure proper compatibility and usage of the components.

React version

Our current supported React version is 17.0.2, please be mindful when using React features that may not yet be supported.

Design

If you'd like to contribute a change to a React component, please first reach out to the backpack team on Slack to discuss and agree on the proposed change. Make sure to add to your message the design (Figma file) and include examples for each state e.g. disabled, expanded etc. if applicable.

Example components

Look at existing components for code style inspiration. Here are some good examples to follow:

CSS

We use CSS Modules along with BEM to prevent collisions and accidental overwrites in CSS.

When creating (S)CSS files, follow the CSS Module naming convention by using the .module.(s)css extension.

When creating or modifying SCSS files, follow these rules

  1. Use Modern SASS API
    • Prefer @use instead of @import
    • Prefer math.div($a, $b) instead of $a / $b. Add @use sass:math statement to the top of your file to make this function available
    • Read more about @use rule and SASS math functions
  2. Use only what you need
    • Instead of blank import of all mixins, import them on demand. E.g. if you need only colour tokens, add @use '../unstable__bpk-mixins/tokens' statement only
  3. Use unstable__bpk-mixins for Backpack components development
    • If you need to add or modify a mixin, do it in packages/bpk-mixins, then execute npm run unstable__bpk-mixins command to make it available for Modern API
    • Import mixins from packages/unstable__bpk-mixins only. Otherwise your code will break because Modern SASS API doesn't support ~ import syntax or slash division

Adding a new component

If you want to add a new component:

  1. Use bpk-component-boilerplate to create a new skeleton React component
  2. Our components where possible are written as function components, familiarise yourself using React component guidelines for more guidance
    • For new components we restrict the use of className and style props to avoid allowing overwriting the component's styles and to ensure consistency across our product.
  3. Create stories - each component has a set of stories living under examples/bpk-component-{name}/stories.ts. Stories should cover most visual variants of a component. Read more about Storybook stories here
  4. Create tests
    • Visual regression tests - Each UI component's stories should also include a story that begins with the name VisualTest - these will then be picked up by Percy to run on CI
    • Unit tests - Unit tests live in the same folder with the component's code and rely on jest and React Testing Library
    • Accessibility tests - Accessibility tests live in the same folder with the component's code and rely on jest-axe and React Testing Library
  5. Add type declaration files within the same folder of the component to ensure proper compatibility and usage of the components
  6. Update README.md following the boilerplate format

Contribute breaking changes

Anytime a change could break existing applications, it's considered a breaking change. To make upgrading Backpack easier for consumers, most breaking changes should follow a deprecation cycle. You should also consider running an experiment before making the changes stable - read more about experiments with Backpack here: Backpack experimentation guidelines.

In most cases, it is recommended to create a V2 component. If your breaking change either

  • requires consumers to make multiple modifications to their code to adopt the changes (e.g. renaming or removing multiple props of an API, large visual changes etc.), OR
  • involves a significant alteration of the structure or API of a component in a way that keeping both APIs within one component may make the code unreadable (e.g. rewriting a component to reduce the number of files from 20 to 5) then you should contribute your changes as a separate V2 component.

If keeping both versions in one component does not affect its readability, you will not need to create a separate component. And finally, if your breaking change does not require consumers to make many modifications or its usages are limited (around 5-10 usages across Skyscanner web repositories) you will not need to follow a deprecation cycle.

Migration guides are required for all breaking changes.

If you are unsure of the impact or scale of your change, reach out to Koala team and we will help you!

Foundation elements

Any visual CSS parameters of the component, such as color, margins, paddings etc. should not live as magic numbers in the component code, but as tokens in the @skyscanner/bpk-foundations-web package.

All of our tokens, Sass mixins, and icons live in the @skyscanner/bpk-foundations-web repository. Head over to the @skyscanner/bpk-foundations-web contribution guidelines if you'd like to contribute any changes to a foundation element.

Accessibility DoD

  • Any changes to the components should be checked for:
    • Ability to navigate using a keyboard only
    • Zoom functionality (Deque University explanation):
      • The page SHOULD be functional AND readable when only the text is magnified to 200% of its initial size
      • Pages must reflow as zoom increases up to 400% so that content continues to be presented in only one column i.e. Content MUST NOT require scrolling in two directions (both vertically and horizontally)
    • Ability to navigate using a screen reader only

Design documentation

See our design system documentation at skyscanner.design.

Experimenting with Backpack components

Want to run A/B experiments on features that entail changes to Backpack components? Continue reading below 👇

When is a component change considered experimental?

If the component or change you want to contribute to Backpack is not stable and it depends on the results of an experiment then it is considered experimental.

What do you need to do to mark a component or part of a component as experimental?

This will depend on what kind of change you are contributing.

Patch and minor changes

For patch and minor changes, you should use JSDoc annotations. JSDoc is a widely used and supported tool in the JavaScript ecosystem that allows developers to document their code. JSDoc comments will be visible in most IDEs.

Major

For major changes, you should create a new experimental V2 component. If the experiment is successful, the old component should be deprecated.

The new component should be added in the same folder as the original component, further nested inside a folder which follows the Bpk{ComponentName}V2 naming. For example, the full path for a new component BpkButtonV2 should be packages/bpk-component-button/src/BpkButtonV2/BpkButton.tsx. The 2 components will then be exported in the index.(js|ts) file of bpk-component-button.

Any follow-up changes to experimental components will not be considered breaking.

When should documentation be created and published?

Each Bpk component has a corresponding README file which contains information about the component such as usage examples and API documentation. Our components' full documentation is at skyscanner.design. New experimental components should have a README file, but don’t need to be published to skyscanner.design. Make sure the README file reflects the component is experimental! When an experiment has run and is considered successful and so the change is stable, documentation can be published.

For changes to existing components, make sure the API documentation is updated to indicate if something is experimental.

Major changes will often require a migration guide. If an experiment is considered succesful, you should add a migration guide within the docs folder located in the respective component folder.

How long does experimentation code live in Backpack?

Experimentation code should be cleaned up at most 2 weeks after an experiment has completed. In the case of a successful experiment, annotations should be removed and documentation should be published. In the case of an unsuccessful experiment, the code should be removed altogether.

Examples

Here’s an end-to-end example on how to add an experimental prop to a Bpk component:

  1. Reach out to Koala with the proposed change
  2. Contribute code changes. Make sure the API table is updated too!
type Props = {
	text: string,
	color: string,
	/**
   * @experimental This prop is experimental and subject to change.
	 * Use with caution.
   */
	sparkles?: boolean
}
const BpkText = ({text, color, sparkles}: Props) => {
    ...
}
  1. Released by Koala
  2. Adopt changes in project
  3. Run experiment
    • if experiment is successful, publish documentation (only Koala members) and remove experimental code.
    • if experiment is unsuccessful and further iterations are needed, repeat from step 2. Otherwise, remove experimental code. That’s all!

How to

Create a pull request to Backpack

For anything non-trivial, we strongly recommend speaking to somebody from Backpack squad before starting work on a PR. This lets us pass on any advice or knowledge we already have about the work you're proposing. It might even be something we're already working on. After this, follow the steps below.

  1. If you are not a Skyscanner employee, fork the repository. If you are a Skyscanner employee, please follow the "Engineering Contribution" guide in the Backpack space in Confluence to get push rights to this repository. This contains information about setting up your Github account such as how to get added to the Skyscanner organisation, or set an SSH key to swap between your GH Enterprise and public GH accounts.
  2. Create a new branch.
  3. Make your changes.
  4. Commit and push your new branch.
  5. Submit a pull request. When submitting a PR ensure you add the correct label to your PR.
    • major, A breaking change (visual or API contract changes)
    • minor, A non-breaking change or a new component
    • patch, A fixed bug or updates to documentation
    • skip-changelog, The change you made should not end up in the release changelog
  6. Notify someone in Backpack squad or drop a note in #backpack.

Bear in mind that small, incremental pull requests are likely to be reviewed faster.

Run tests

npm test will pick up any files that end in -test.js, so you don't need to do anything to make Jest pick them up.

You can also run the tests in 'watch mode', which means the process will continually run and run tests every time files change. Use npm run jest:watch to do this.

There are also visual regression tests, powered by Percy.

These visual tests are run on CI. When a PR is raised, a build should be showing on the Percy Backpack dashboard. Head into this build/run and you should be able to view any differences there. Ask a member of the Koala team to approve the changes once you have confirmed it all looks as expected.

Visual regression tests run on all Storybook stories titled 'Visual test'.

Run linters manually
  • npm run lint to lint both JS and SCSS.
  • npm run lint:js to lint JS.
  • npm run lint:js:fix to lint and try to automatically fix any errors.
  • npm run lint:scss to lint SCSS.
Publish packages (Backpack squad members only)
  • Publish the latest draft on the releases pages
  • Ensure CI runs the release workflow successfully
  • Once released verify the artifacts are available

And finally..

If you have any questions at all, don't hesitate to get in touch. We love to talk all things Backpack and we look forward to seeing your contribution!