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Component Story Format (CSF) |
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Component Story Format (CSF) is the recommended way to write stories. It's an open standard based on ES6 modules that is portable beyond Storybook.
If you have stories written in the older `storiesOf()` syntax, it was removed in Storybook 8.0 and is no longer maintained. We recommend migrating your stories to CSF. See the [migration guide](../migration-guide/index.mdx#storiesof-to-csf) for more information.In CSF, stories and component metadata are defined as ES Modules. Every component story file consists of a required default export and one or more named exports.
The default export defines metadata about your component, including the component
itself, its title
(where it will show up in the navigation UI story hierarchy), decorators, and parameters.
The component
field is required and used by addons for automatic prop table generation and display of other component metadata. The title
field is optional and should be unique (i.e., not re-used across files).
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For more examples, see writing stories.
With CSF, every named export in the file represents a story object by default.
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The exported identifiers will be converted to "start case" using Lodash's startCase function. For example:
Identifier | Transformation |
---|---|
name | Name |
someName | Some Name |
someNAME | Some NAME |
some_custom_NAME | Some Custom NAME |
someName1234 | Some Name 1 2 3 4 |
We recommend that all export names to start with a capital letter.
Story objects can be annotated with a few different fields to define story-level decorators and parameters, and also to define the name
of the story.
Storybook's name
configuration element is helpful in specific circumstances. Common use cases are names with special characters or Javascript restricted words. If not specified, Storybook defaults to the named export.
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Starting in SB 6.0, stories accept named inputs called Args. Args are dynamic data that are provided (and possibly updated by) Storybook and its addons.
Consider Storybook’s "Button" example of a text button that logs its click events:
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Now consider the same example, re-written with args:
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Or even more simply:
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Not only are these versions shorter and more accessible to write than their no-args counterparts, but they are also more portable since the code doesn't depend on the actions addon specifically.
For more information on setting up Docs and Actions, see their respective documentation.
Storybook's play
functions are small snippets of code executed when the story renders in the UI. They are convenient helper methods to help you test use cases that otherwise weren't possible or required user intervention.
A good use case for the play
function is a form component. With previous Storybook versions, you'd write your set of stories and had to interact with the component to validate it. With Storybook's play functions, you could write the following story:
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When the story renders in the UI, Storybook executes each step defined in the play
function and runs the assertions without the need for user interaction.
<IfRenderer renderer={[ 'angular', 'ember', 'html', 'preact', 'qwik', 'react', 'solid', 'vue', 'web-components' ]}>
Starting in Storybook 6.4, you can write your stories as JavaScript objects, reducing the boilerplate code you need to generate to test your components, thus improving functionality and usability. Render
functions are helpful methods to give you additional control over how the story renders. For example, if you were writing a story as an object and you wanted to specify how your component should render, you could write the following:
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When Storybook loads this story, it will detect the existence of a render
function and adjust the component rendering accordingly based on what's defined.
Storybook handles named exports and the name
option slightly differently. When should you use one vs. the other?
Storybook will always use the named export to determine the story ID and URL.
If you specify the name
option, it will be used as the story display name in the UI. Otherwise, it defaults to the named export, processed through Storybook's storyNameFromExport
and lodash.startCase
functions.
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When you want to change the name of your story, rename the CSF export. It will change the name of the story and also change the story's ID and URL.
It would be best if you used the name
configuration element in the following cases:
- You want the name to show up in the Storybook UI in a way that's not possible with a named export, e.g., reserved keywords like "default", special characters like emoji, spacing/capitalization other than what's provided by
storyNameFromExport
. - You want to preserve the Story ID independently from changing how it's displayed. Having stable Story IDs is helpful for integration with third-party tools.
In some cases, you may want to export a mixture of stories and non-stories (e.g., mocked data).
You can use the optional configuration fields includeStories
and excludeStories
in the default export to make this possible. You can define them as an array of strings or regular expressions.
Consider the following story file:
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When this file renders in Storybook, it treats ComplexStory
and SimpleStory
as stories and ignores the data
named exports.
For this particular example, you could achieve the same result in different ways, depending on what's convenient:
includeStories: /^[A-Z]/
includeStories: /.*Story$/
includeStories: ['SimpleStory', 'ComplexStory']
excludeStories: /^[a-z]/
excludeStories: /.*Data$/
excludeStories: ['simpleData', 'complexData']
The first option is the recommended solution if you follow the best practice of starting story exports with an uppercase letter (i.e., use UpperCamelCase).
In CSF 2, the named exports are always functions that instantiate a component, and those functions can be annotated with configuration options. For example:
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This declares a Primary story for a Button that renders itself by spreading { primary: true }
into the component. The default.title
metadata says where to place the story in a navigation hierarchy.
Here's the CSF 3 equivalent:
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Let's go through the changes individually to understand what's going on.
In CSF 3, the named exports are objects, not functions. This allows us to reuse stories more efficiently with the JS spread operator.
Consider the following addition to the intro example, which creates a PrimaryOnDark
story that renders against a dark background:
Here's the CSF 2 implementation:
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Primary.bind({})
copies the story function, but it doesn't copy the annotations hanging off the function, so we must add PrimaryOnDark.args = Primary.args
to inherit the args.
In CSF 3, we can spread the Primary
object to carry over all its annotations:
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Learn more about named story exports.
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In CSF 3, you specify how a story renders through a render
function. We can rewrite a CSF 2 example to CSF 3 through the following steps.
Let's start with a simple CSF 2 story function:
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Now, let's rewrite it as a story object in CSF 3 with an explicit render
function that tells the story how to render itself. Like CSF 2, this gives us full control of how we render a component or even a collection of components.
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<IfRenderer renderer={[ 'angular', 'ember', 'html', 'preact', 'qwik', 'react', 'solid', 'vue', 'web-components' ]}> Learn more about render functions.
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But in CSF 2, a lot of story functions are identical: take the component specified in the default export and spread args into it. What's interesting about these stories is not the function, but the args passed into the function.
CSF 3 provides default render functions for each renderer. If all you're doing is spreading args into your component—which is the most common case—you don't need to specify any render
function at all:
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<IfRenderer renderer={[ 'angular', 'ember', 'html', 'preact', 'qwik', 'react', 'solid', 'vue', 'web-components' ]}> For more information, see the section on custom render functions.
Finally, CSF 3 can automatically generate titles.
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You can still specify a title like in CSF 2, but if you don't specify one, it can be inferred from the story's path on disk. For more information, see the section on configuring story loading.