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2021-10-13T16:00:00+02:00 Guidelines for Frontend Development guidelines-frontend 20 false false
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developers Guidelines for Frontend 20 guidelines-frontend

Guidelines for Frontend Development

Table of Contents

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Background

Gitea uses Less CSS, Fomantic-UI (based on jQuery) and Vue2 for its frontend.

The HTML pages are rendered by Go HTML Template.

The source files can be found in the following directories:

  • Less styles: web_src/less/
  • JavaScript files: web_src/js/
  • Vue components: web_src/js/components/
  • Go HTML templates: templates/

General Guidelines

We recommend Google HTML/CSS Style Guide and Google JavaScript Style Guide

Gitea specific guidelines:

  1. Every feature (Fomantic-UI/jQuery module) should be put in separate files/directories.
  2. HTML ids and classes should use kebab-case.
  3. HTML ids and classes used in JavaScript should be unique for the whole project, and should contain 2-3 feature related keywords. We recommend to use the js- prefix for classes that are only used in JavaScript.
  4. jQuery events across different features could use their own namespaces if there are potential conflicts.
  5. CSS styling for classes provided by frameworks should not be overwritten. Always use new class-names with 2-3 feature related keywords to overwrite framework styles.
  6. The backend can pass complex data to the frontend by using ctx.PageData["myModuleData"] = map[]{}
  7. Simple pages and SEO-related pages use Go HTML Template render to generate static Fomantic-UI HTML output. Complex pages can use Vue2 (or Vue3 in future).

Framework Usage

Mixing different frameworks together is discouraged, it makes the code difficult to be maintained. A JavaScript module should follow one major framework and follow the framework's best practice.

Recommended implementations:

  • Vue + Vanilla JS
  • Fomantic-UI (jQuery)
  • Vanilla JS

Discouraged implementations:

  • Vue + Fomantic-UI (jQuery)
  • jQuery + Vanilla JS

To make UI consistent, Vue components can use Fomantic-UI CSS classes. Although mixing different frameworks is discouraged, it should also work if the mixing is necessary and the code is well-designed and maintainable.

async Functions

Only mark a function as async if and only if there are await calls or Promise returns inside the function.

It's not recommended to use async event listeners, which may lead to problems. The reason is that the code after await is executed outside the event dispatch. Reference: https://github.com/github/eslint-plugin-github/blob/main/docs/rules/async-preventdefault.md

If we want to call an async function in a non-async context, it's recommended to use const _promise = asyncFoo() to tell readers that this is done by purpose, we want to call the async function and ignore the Promise. Some lint rules and IDEs also have warnings if the returned Promise is not handled.

HTML Attributes and dataset

The usage of dataset is forbidden, its camel-casing behaviour makes it hard to grep for attributes. However, there are still some special cases, so the current guideline is:

  • For legacy code:

    • $.data() should be refactored to $.attr().
    • $.data() can be used to bind some non-string data to elements in rare cases, but it is highly discouraged.
  • For new code:

    • node.dataset should not be used, use node.getAttribute instead.
    • never bind any user data to a DOM node, use a suitable design pattern to describe the relation between node and data.

Legacy Code

A lot of legacy code already existed before this document's written. It's recommended to refactor legacy code to follow the guidelines.

Vue2/Vue3 and JSX

Gitea is using Vue2 now, we plan to upgrade to Vue3. We decided not to introduce JSX to keep the HTML and the JavaScript code separated.