
components.styles
★ 486by coinbase · part of coinbase/cds
components.styles — an installable skill for AI agents, published by coinbase/cds.
This is the playbook your agent receives when the skill activates — you don't need to read it to use the skill, but it's here to audit before installing.
name: components.styles
description: Guidelines writing styles API (styles, classNames, and static classNames) for a CDS component. Use this skill when adding customization options to a React component via styles or classNames props or when needing to update the docsite with component styles documentation.
argument-hint: <ComponentName> [additional context] (e.g., "Button", "LineChart add real-time examples")
Goal: Add styles API (styles, classNames, and static classNames) to a CDS component and/or update the component documentation with styles documentation.
If no component name is provided, ask the user which component they want to add styles to.
Step 1: Locate the Component
Find the component source file:
packages/web/src/[source-category]/[ComponentName].tsx # for web
packages/mobile/src/[source-category]/[ComponentName].tsx # for mobileStep 2: Evaluate Component Structure
⚠️ IMPORTANT: Adding styles/classNames props is a commitment to the component's internal structure.
Before adding styles API, carefully review the component's JSX structure:
- Flag if the component could be simplified (e.g., unnecessary wrappers, redundant containers)
- Do NOT add styles to elements that may be refactored - this creates breaking changes
- Ask the user if you notice the component structure could be improved before committing to it
Once published, changing or removing selectors is a breaking change for consumers.
Step 3: Identify Styleable Elements
Review the component's JSX to identify elements that should be targetable via styles/classNames:
- Root element: The outermost container element
- Named sections: Elements with semantic meaning (e.g.,
start,content,end,header,footer) - Sub-components: Internal elements that users might want to customize
- Conditional elements: Elements that render based on props
Approved Selector Names
IMPORTANT: Before adding a new selector name not in this list, get explicit confirmation from the user. When a new selector is approved, add it to this list.
Approved Selectors (alphabetical)
| Selector | Description |
|---|---|
accessory | Accessory element (e.g., chevron, icon at end) |
activeIndicator | Active indicator element (e.g., in tabs) |
bottomContent | Bottom section content |
carousel | Main carousel track element |
carouselContainer | Outer carousel container |
childrenContainer | Container wrapping children |
content | Main content area |
contentContainer | Container wrapping content |
description | Description text element |
day | Date cell in a calendar grid |
end | End slot content (e.g., actions, icons) |
fill | Fill/progress indicator within a track |
header | Header section |
helperText | Helper/assistive text below content |
icon | Icon element |
intermediary | Middle/intermediary element between sections |
label | Label text element |
labels | Container for multiple labels |
logo | Logo element |
mainContent | Primary content area |
media | Media element (image, avatar, icon) |
modal | Visible modal card element |
navigation | Navigation controls (e.g., prev/next buttons) |
overlay | Full-viewport overlay/backdrop element |
pagination | Pagination indicators |
pressable | Pressable/interactive wrapper |
progress | Progress indicator element |
progressBar | ProgressBar sub-component within a composed component |
root | Root/outermost container element |
safeArea | Safe area region wrapping content |
start | Start slot content (e.g., back button) |
step | Individual step element (in steppers) |
substepContainer | Container for nested sub-steps |
subtitle | Subtitle text element |
tab | Tab element (in tabs) |
tabs | Tabs container element |
thumb | Draggable thumb element (in sliders) |
title | Title text element |
titleStack | Stack containing title/subtitle/description |
titleStackContainer | Container wrapping titleStack |
topContent | Top section content |
track | Track/rail element (in progress bars, sliders) |
trigger | Trigger element that opens a dropdown/popover |
JSDoc Convention for Selector Descriptions
Selector JSDoc comments describe what the element is, not what the prop does:
- Sentence case, no trailing period
- Concise noun phrase describing the element itself
- Single-line format:
/** Description */ - For conditional elements, append context after a comma:
/** Header element, only rendered on phone viewport */
Examples:
/** Root element */
/** Title text element */
/** Navigation controls element */
/** Header element, only rendered on phone viewport in horizontal direction */Step 4: Add Styles API (Web Components)
For web components, add three things:
4.1 Static Class Names
Add a static classNames object with JSDoc comments. Place this before the component's type definitions:
/**
* Static class names for [ComponentName] component parts.
* Use these selectors to target specific elements with CSS.
*/
export const [componentName]ClassNames = {
/** Root element */
root: 'cds-[ComponentName]',
/** [Concise element description] */
[selectorName]: 'cds-[ComponentName]-[selectorName]',
// ... more selectors as needed
} as const;Naming conventions:
- Use
cds-prefix for all class names - Use PascalCase for component name:
cds-NavigationBar - Use camelCase for sub-elements:
cds-NavigationBar-contentWrapper,cds-Foo-titleStack - Keep names descriptive but concise
Example:
export const fooClassNames = {
root: 'cds-Foo',
contentWrapper: 'cds-Foo-contentWrapper',
titleStack: 'cds-Foo-titleStack',
helperText: 'cds-Foo-helperText',
} as const;4.2 Update Component Props Type
Import and use the StylesAndClassNames utility type:
import type { StylesAndClassNames } from '../types';
export type [ComponentName]BaseProps = BoxBaseProps & {
// ... other props (without styles/classNames)
};
export type [ComponentName]Props = [ComponentName]BaseProps & StylesAndClassNames<typeof [componentName]ClassNames> & Omit<BoxProps<[ComponentName]DefaultElement>, 'children'>;This automatically generates the styles and classNames props based on your static classNames object.
4.3 Apply in Component Implementation
Apply the static classNames, dynamic classNames, and styles in the component:
import { cx } from '../cx';
// In the component:
<VStack
className={cx([componentName]ClassNames.root, className, classNames?.root)}
style={{ ...style, ...styles?.root }}
// ... other props
>
<HStack
className={cx([componentName]ClassNames.contentWrapper, classNames?.contentWrapper)}
style={styles?.contentWrapper}
>
{children}
</HStack>
</VStack>4.4 Add Tests for Static Class Names
Add tests to verify that static class names are applied correctly to the component. This ensures the class names remain stable for consumers who depend on them for CSS targeting.
Test pattern:
import { [componentName]ClassNames } from '../[ComponentName]';
describe('[ComponentName] static classNames', () => {
it('applies static class names to component elements', () => {
render(
<[ComponentName]WithTheme
start={<div>Start</div>} // Include props that render conditional elements
>
<div>Children</div>
</[ComponentName]WithTheme>,
);
// Test root element
const root = screen.getByRole('[role]'); // or use testID/other selector
expect(root).toHaveClass([componentName]ClassNames.root);
// Test sub-elements using querySelector with the static class name
expect(root.querySelector(`.${[componentName]ClassNames.start}`)).toBeInTheDocument();
expect(root.querySelector(`.${[componentName]ClassNames.content}`)).toBeInTheDocument();
});
});Key testing principles:
- Import the static classNames object from the component
- Use
toHaveClass()for elements accessible via roles/queries - Use
querySelector()with the static class name for internal elements - Test all selectors, including those on conditionally rendered elements (pass appropriate props)
Example from NavigationBar:
import { navigationBarClassNames } from '../NavigationBar';
describe('NavigationBar static classNames', () => {
it('applies static class names to component elements', () => {
render(
<NavigationBarWithTheme start={<div>Start</div>}>
<div>Children</div>
</NavigationBarWithTheme>,
);
const nav = screen.getByRole('navigation');
expect(nav).toHaveClass(navigationBarClassNames.root);
expect(nav.querySelector(`.${navigationBarClassNames.start}`)).toBeInTheDocument();
expect(nav.querySelector(`.${navigationBarClassNames.content}`)).toBeInTheDocument();
});
});Step 5: Add Styles API (Mobile Components)
For mobile components, the pattern is simpler (no static classNames):
5.1 Add styles prop type
export type [ComponentName]Props = {
// ... other props
/** Custom styles for individual elements of the [ComponentName] component */
styles?: {
/** Root container element */
root?: StyleProp<ViewStyle>;
/** [Concise element description] */
[selectorName]?: StyleProp<ViewStyle | TextStyle>;
// ... more selectors as needed
};
};5.2 Apply in Component Implementation
<View style={[defaultStyles.root, styles?.root]}>
<View style={[defaultStyles.content, styles?.content]}>{children}</View>
</View>Step 6: Add JSDoc Notes for Special Cases
If any selectors have special rendering conditions, append the note after the element description with a comma:
styles?: {
/** Header element, only rendered on phone viewport in horizontal direction */
header?: React.CSSProperties;
};Common cases to document:
- Viewport-specific rendering (phone/tablet/desktop)
- Direction-specific rendering (horizontal/vertical)
- Conditional rendering based on props
- Elements that only render with certain data (e.g., subSteps)
Reference: StylesAndClassNames Utility
The StylesAndClassNames utility type (from packages/web/src/types.ts) automatically generates:
// Given:
const fooClassNames = {
root: 'cds-Foo',
contentWrapper: 'cds-Foo-contentWrapper',
} as const;
// StylesAndClassNames<typeof fooClassNames> generates:
{
styles?: {
root?: React.CSSProperties;
contentWrapper?: React.CSSProperties;
};
classNames?: {
root?: string;
contentWrapper?: string;
};
}Reference: NavigationBar Example
See packages/web/src/navigation/NavigationBar.tsx for a complete example of the styles API pattern:
- Lines 16-28: Static classNames with JSDoc
- Line 80: Using
StylesAndClassNamestype on regular Props (not BaseProps) - Lines 117, 140, 149: Applying classNames with
cx() - Lines 125, 142, 152: Applying styles
See packages/web/src/navigation/__tests__/NavigationBar.test.tsx for static classNames test example:
NavigationBar static classNamesdescribe block: Tests all static class names are applied
Step 7: Update Documentation
After adding the styles API to the component, update the documentation:
-
Run the docgen to regenerate styles data:
yarn nx run docs:docgen -
Create or update the styles documentation use the
components.write-docsSKILL for general knowledge on how to write component documentation:- Create
_webStyles.mdxwith ComponentStylesTable and StylesExplorer - Create
_mobileStyles.mdxwith ComponentStylesTable (if mobile) - Update
index.mdxto import and render the styles tables
- Create
Final Checklist
Before completing, verify:
- Reviewed component structure for potential simplifications (flagged to user if found)
- Selector names are from the approved list (or got user confirmation for new ones)
- Each selector has a JSDoc comment following the convention (sentence case, no trailing period, concise noun phrase)
- Class names follow
cds-ComponentName-selectorNameconvention (camelCase) - Using
StylesAndClassNamesutility type on regular Props (not BaseProps) (web) or manual styles type (mobile) - Static classNames applied with
cx()in component JSX (web only) - Dynamic classNames and styles props applied correctly
- Special rendering conditions documented in JSDoc
- Tests added for static classNames (web only) - see Step 4.4
- Ran
yarn nx run docs:docgento regenerate styles data - Documentation updated to include new component styles information
- Updated this file's "Approved Selector Names" table if new selectors were added
npx skills add https://github.com/coinbase/cds --skill components.stylesRun this in your project — your agent picks the skill up automatically.
No common issues documented yet. If you hit a problem, the repository's GitHub Issues page is the best place to look.