Contribution Guide

A comprehensive guide on contributing to Nuxt UI v3, including project structure, development workflow, and best practices.

Nuxt UI thrives thanks to its incredible community ❤️. We welcome all contributions through bug reports, pull requests, and feedback to help make this library even better.

Before reporting a bug or requesting a feature, make sure that you have read through our documentation and existing issues.

Project Structure

Here's an overview of the key directories and files in the Nuxt UI project structure:

Documentation

The documentation lives in the docs folder as a Nuxt app using @nuxt/content v3 to generate pages from Markdown files. See the Content v3 Docs for details on how it works. Here's a breakdown of its structure:

├── app/
   ├── assets/
   ├── components/
   └── content/
       └── examples   # Components used in documentation as examples
   ├── composables/
   └── ...
├── content/
   ├── 1.getting-started
   ├── 2.composables
   └── 3.components       # Components documentation

Module

The module code resides in the src folder. Here's a breakdown of its structure:

├── devtools/
├── plugins/
├── runtime/
   ├── components/        # Where all the components are located
   ├── Accordion.vue
   ├── Alert.vue
   └── ...
   ├── composables/
   ├── locale/
   ├── plugins/
   ├── types/
   ├── utils/
   └── vue/
       ├── components/
       └── plugins/
├── theme/                 # This where the theme for each component is located
   ├── accordion.ts       # Theme for Accordion component
   ├── alert.ts
   └── ...
└── module.ts

CLI

To make development easier, we've created a CLI that you can use to generate components and locales. You can access it using the nuxt-ui make command.

First, you need to link the CLI to your global environment:

npm link

Components

You can create new components using the following command:

nuxt-ui make component <name> [options]

Available options:

  • --primitive Create a primitive component
  • --pro Create a pro component
  • --prose Create a prose component (requires --pro)
  • --content Create a content component (requires --pro)
  • --template Only generate specific template (available templates: playground, docs, test, theme, component)

Example:

# Create a basic component
nuxt-ui make component my-component

# Create a pro component
nuxt-ui make component page-section --pro

# Create a pro prose component
nuxt-ui make component heading --pro --prose

# Create a pro content component
nuxt-ui make component block --pro --content

# Generate only documentation template
nuxt-ui make component my-component --template=docs
When creating a new component, the CLI will automatically generate all the necessary files like the component itself, theme, tests, and documentation.

Locales

You can create new locales using the following command:

nuxt-ui make locale --code <code> --name <name>
Learn more about i18n in the documentation.

Submit a Pull Request (PR)

Before you start, check if there's an existing issue describing the problem or feature request you're working on. If there is, please leave a comment on the issue to let us know you're working on it.

If there isn't, open a new issue to discuss the problem or feature.

Local Development

To begin local development, follow these steps:

Clone the nuxt/ui repository to your local machine

git clone -b v3 https://github.com/nuxt/ui.git

Enable Corepack

corepack enable

Install dependencies

pnpm install

Generate type stubs

pnpm run dev:prepare

Start development

  • To work on the documentation located in the docs folder, run:
pnpm run docs
  • To test the Nuxt components using the playground, run:
pnpm run dev
  • To test the Vue components using the playground, run:
pnpm run dev:vue
If you're working on implementing a new component, check the CLI section to kickstart the process.

IDE Setup

We recommend using VSCode alongside the ESLint extension. You can enable auto-fix and formatting when saving your code. Here's how:

{
  "editor.codeActionsOnSave": {
    "source.fixAll": false,
    "source.fixAll.eslint": true
  }
}
Since ESLint is already configured to format the code, there's no need for duplicating functionality with Prettier. If you have it installed in your editor, we recommend disabling it to avoid conflicts.

Linting

You can use the lint command to check for linting errors:

pnpm run lint # check for linting errors
pnpm run lint:fix # fix linting errors

Type Checking

We use TypeScript for type checking. You can use the typecheck command to check for type errors:

pnpm run typecheck

Testing

Before submitting a PR, ensure that you run the tests for both nuxt and vue:

pnpm run test # for Nuxt
pnpm run test:vue # for Vue
If you have to update the snapshots, press u when running the tests.

Commit Conventions

We use Conventional Commits for commit messages, which allows a changelog to be auto-generated based on the commits. Please read the guide through if you aren't familiar with it already.

  • Use fix and feat for code changes that affect functionality or logic
  • Use docs for documentation changes and chore for maintenance tasks

Making a Pull Request

  • Follow along the instructions provided when creating a PR
  • Ensure your PR's title adheres to the Conventional Commits since it will be used once the code is merged.
  • Multiple commits are fine; no need to rebase or force push. We'll use Squash and Merge when merging.
  • Ensure lint, typecheck and tests work before submitting the PR. Avoid making unrelated changes.

We'll review it promptly. If assigned to a maintainer, they'll review it carefully. Ignore the red text; it's for tracking purposes.

Thanks

Thank you again for being interested in this project! You are awesome! ❤️