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Getting started

Storybook is developed against a specific node version which is defined in an .nvmrc file. You can use any Node version manager that uses the .nvmrc configuration file (we recommend fnm).

Ensure you have the required system utilities

You will need to have the following installed:

  • git
  • node
  • yarn

Using fnm as a Node version manager

  • Install fnm as per instructions

  • In your shell setup include the use-on-cd, corepack-enabled and version-file-strategy recursive parameters in the fnm env command, e.g.

    eval "$(fnm env --use-on-cd --corepack-enabled --version-file-strategy recursive)"

Running the local development environment

  • Ensure if you are using Windows to use the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL).
  • Run yarn start in the root directory to run a basic test Storybook "sandbox".

The yarn start script will generate a React Vite TypeScript sandbox with a set of test stories inside it, as well as taking all steps required to get it running (building the various packages we need etc). There is no need to run yarn or yarn install as yarn start will do this for you.

Issues

If you run yarn start and encounter the following error, try rerunning yarn start a second time:

>  NX   ENOENT: no such file or directory, open 'storybook/code/node_modules/nx/package.json'

If you are a Storybook contributor and still experience issues, it is recommended that you verify your local Storybook instance for any unintentional local changes. To do this, you can use the following command:

git clean -dx --dry-run

By executing this command, you will be able to see which untracked or ignored files and directories will be removed from your working directory if you run it with the --force flag. Before running the command with the --force flag, please commit any local changes that you want to keep. Otherwise they will be lost.

Forked repos

If you have forked the repository, you should disable Github Actions for your repo as many of them (e.g. pushing to sandbox) will fail without proper authorization. In your Github repo, go to Settings > Actions > General > set the Actions Permissions to Disable actions.

Running against different sandbox templates

You can also pick a specific template to use as your sandbox by running yarn task, which will prompt you to make further choices about which template you want and which task you want to run.

Making code changes

If you want to make code changes to Storybook packages while running a sandbox, you'll need to do the following:

  1. In a second terminal run yarn build --watch <package-1> <package-2> in the code/ directory. The package names is the bit after the @storybook/ in the published package. For instance, to build the @storybook/react @storybook/core-server @storybook/api @storybook/addon-docs packages at the same time in watch mode:
cd code
yarn build --watch react core addon-docs
  1. If you are running the sandbox in "linked" mode (the default), you should see the changes reflected on a refresh (you may need to restart it if changing server packages)

  2. If you are running the sandbox in "unlinked" mode you'll need to re-run the sandbox from the publish step to see the changes:

yarn task --task dev --template <your template> --start-from=publish

Making code changes when working on Angular-specific code

If you are working on Angular-specific code, you will need to append --prod to the above mentioned commands to ensure that the Angular compiler is able to pick up the changes appropriately and doesn't fail. This will build all the packages in production mode.

yarn task --prod
cd code
yarn build --prod --watch angular core addon-docs

Contributing to Storybook

For further advice on how to contribute, please refer to our NEW contributing guide on the Storybook website.