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Summary: Storybook 8 integrates Vue’s official language tools to improve how Storybook generates controls and documentation in Vue Vite projects. Get started by upgrade your Vue Storybook docgen configuration today! Thanks to the great work of our Vue maintainers (Chakir, Lars, and Kasper), Storybook 8 significantly improves how we generate controls and documentation in Vue projects. We're using a
Update, March 12: Storybook 8 and Visual Tests addon are out now! Learn more in the Storybook 8 launch announcement or Visual Tests addon’s launch announcement. Storybook 8 introduces a totally new workflow for safeguarding your UI from unexpected visual changes through Storybook’s Visual Tests addon! Learn how it works and try the beta today. Why visual testing?The challenge of testing UI is that
🚀Update, March 12: Storybook 8 is out now!Storybook 8 (our next major release) brings React Server Component (RSC) compatibility to Storybook for the very first time, letting you build, test and document Next.js server applications in isolation. In our first demo, we used Storybook to develop a contact card RSC, which accessed contact data both asynchronously and from a file system while simulati
Storybook 7.6 contains massive performance improvements. Most will become the default in our next major release (Storybook 8.0), but you can adopt them today by opting in manually. Here’s how to get started! ⛳️ --test flag for 2-4x faster test builds 🩺 2.2x faster React docgen 🧳 Streamline essential addons 🌐 SWC for 50% faster Webpack projects 🔬 @storybook/test for more streamlined and perform
React Server Components (RSC) are a new programming model for React-based web UIs. In contrast to traditional React “client” components, they only render on the server. This leads to a variety of performance and security benefits, but it is also a huge departure from the React tools and libraries we use today. One of the most impacted areas is component-driven development and testing. Tools like S
Storybook 7.6 is here! This is the final minor release in the Storybook 7 series. 7.6 improves Storybook’s performance and UX, enhances our integrations with tools across the frontend ecosystem, and paves the way for our next major release: Storybook 8. 🔥 Improved SWC support🧪 New test utilities and fast build mode🔼 NextJS SWC + avif support & fixes🇸 SvelteKit page and navigation mocking⚛️ Rea
Storybook is the best way to build and test your UI components in isolation. Storybook 7.6 (now in alpha) takes Storybook's testing even further with the introduction of @storybook/test. It brings a set of new utilities for spying on your components, interacting with them in the browser, and asserting the results. Plus better performance and smaller size. The new hotness@storybook/test consolidate
Storybook is the gold standard UI workshop environment. It’s used across the industry by teams at Monday.com, The Guardian, Intuit, and many more for developing, documenting, and testing UIs. Today, we're thrilled to introduce Storybook's latest version: Storybook 7.5! It brings a range of new features that enhance the Storybook experience. Let's dive in! ⚡️ Vite 5 and Lit 3.0 support💨 2.2x faste
TLDR: We’re launching a visual tests addon for Storybook. It automatically QAs the look of all your components, tracks their appearance, and notifies you of visual changes right inside your Storybook env. Sign up here for early access! Testing UIs is awkward because you have to account for tons of design details. “Did I pick the right shade of gray?" – "Did margins collapse or stack?" The simplest
Storybook is the industry standard workshop for UI component development, documentation, and testing. It’s used by teams at Twitter, GitHub, the BBC, and the New York Times. After launching Storybook 7.0 back in April, we plan to ship future releases that are both more frequent and smaller in size. That will help Storybook keep in sync with changes across the frontend ecosystem while smoothing the
When you start learning a new skill, there’s nothing better to have than a great teacher. That's also true for Storybook. The world's leading frontend teams use Storybook to build their UIs, but it can feel tricky to understand the basics if you're learning by yourself. Today, I'm excited to share a sneak peek of the in-app tour developer experience in Storybook 7.1. It teaches new users how to ge
Storybook is the gold standard UI workshop environment. It’s used across the industry by teams at Monday.com, The Guardian, Intuit, and many others due to its unparalleled framework compatibility and rich features for development, documentation, and testing. Today, I’m excited to announce Storybook 7 (SB7), our first major release in over two years and by far our largest ever. It includes: ⚡ First
Storybook 8 focuses on improving performance, compatibility, and stability. Key features include: 🩻 A new visual testing workflow via the Visual Tests addon 💨 2-4x faster test builds, 25-50% faster React docgen, and SWC support for Webpack projects 🧩 Improved framework support: you no longer need to install React as a peer dependency when using a non-React renderer 🎛️ Strengthened control gene
Writing in TypeScript makes you more productive and your code more robust. You get type check warnings, autocomplete, and Storybook infers types to generate an ArgsTable automatically. It also helps detect bugs and edge cases while coding. Storybook has provided built-in zero config TypeScript support since 6.0. That gives a great autocomplete experience, but sadly it didn’t warn you about missing
Stories visualize how a component behaves in different scenarios. Component Story Format (CSF) is the universal file format for stories. Component Story Format 3 marks an evolution in stories that trims boilerplate code and improves ergonomics. This makes stories more concise and faster to write. I'm excited to announce the full release of CSF3. During the 18 month beta period, the community helpe
Upgrading npm packages can be a bit like crossing a minefield. Even a tiny patch upgrade can blow up your entire stack. Unfortunately, this kind of issue is common in modern open-source software. Packages often break due to bugs in their code, bugs in their dependencies, or incompatible transitive dependency upgrades. As maintainers of Storybook—one of the most popular UI development tools—we're a
Storybook is the industry-standard UI development workshop for components and pages. It's used by BBC, Netflix, Twitter, and thousands more teams. Our goal is to make the tools and techniques used by the best frontend teams available to everyone. Today, Storybook has established itself as the best practice for component development, testing, and documentation. It supports every major web framework
Our mission is to improve the UX of the internet. So far, we’ve made a lot of progress. Teams around the world use Storybook to power their frontend workflows. Microsoft documents their universal design system, Fluent. Firefox develops pages for their web apps in isolation. While BBC automates testing for their component library across dozens of international locales. I’m excited to share an early
Next.js is used in tens of thousands of websites and apps. With the recent release of v13, it’s more capable than ever, including many improvements to key features like routing and image optimization. But with all this change, it can be tough to migrate your existing Next app, much less everything it integrates with. Storybook is the de facto standard for isolated component development. We're exci
Vite is a next-gen build tool that has taken the web development world by storm. It gives you fast startup, instant reloads, widespread compatibility, and easy configuration. With nearly GitHub 50k stars, almost 2 million weekly npm downloads, and 650+ contributors, Vite is clearly a “big deal.” Storybook first supported Vite in April 2021 (two months after Vite 2.0 was released) with help from co
Teams around the world use Storybook to power their frontend workflows. But how it is used can vary immensely. Microsoft documents their Fluent design system. Mozilla develops pages for their web apps in isolation. While BBC automates testing for readers in every locale. The breadth of Storybook’s use cases makes it tricky for new folks to understand the core value. Why do developers actually use
Storybook supports every major view layer, countless workflows, and legions of frontend developers. Despite giant leaps in functionality over the last few years, the core user experience hasn’t changed since version 5.0. Till now. Last month, I shared a sneak peek of Storybook 7.0’s design that streamlines core UI patterns that devs use every day. I’m thrilled to announce that these updates are no
You need to keep a lot of details in your head when developing UI components—prop names, styling, state management, event handlers, etc. By using TypeScript to build your components, you can capture those details better and automate your workflow. Your code editor will type-check your code and offer better autocomplete, saving significant development time and effort. You get the same improved ergo
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