Storytale is a Gradle Plugin designed to help developers to show their composables and develop them isolated by generating a gallery of the project components.
Check the examples
and their generated web gallery here
Since Storytale is still in the early stages of development, the api is marked as unstable, but this section will also show you how to use Storytale
to write code for your components, so let's get started! 🌟
using Version Catalog
libs.versions.toml
[versions]
storytale = "0.0.1+dev5"
[plugins]
storytale = { id = "org.jetbrains.compose.storytale", version.ref = "storytale" }
For the latest version check out the Releases page
build.gradle.kts
root level
plugins {
alias(libs.plugins.storytale) apply false
}
build.gradle.kts
app level
plugins {
alias(libs.plugins.storytale)
}
repositories {
mavenCentral()
maven("https://maven.pkg.jetbrains.space/public/p/compose/dev")
}
Note
Storytale has not yet released its first version on mavenCentral
. Currently, we publish dev builds to maven("https://maven.pkg.jetbrains.space/public/p/compose/dev"), so it's required to add this repository as shown above.
Storytale can be used for Compose Multiplatform projects. To start using the Storytale API, you need to define a sourceset for the component you want to test (for example, it might only be used for Android/iOS
platforms, or it could be common for all platforms).
In your app's 'src' folder, go to New -> Directory:
Now, your project structure will look like this:
└── src/
├── androidMain
├── commonMain
├── xxxxxStories/
│ └── kotlin
└── desktopMain
Let's try to write a simple function in commonMain
:
commonMain/PrimaryButton.kt
@Composable
fun PrimaryButton(onClick: () -> Unit, enabled: Boolean = true) {
Button(onClick = onClick, enabled = enabled) {
Text("Click me!")
}
}
commonStories/kotlin/PrimaryButton.story.kt
import org.jetbrains.compose.storytale.story
val `PrimaryButton default state` by story {
val enabled by parameter(true)
PrimaryButton(onClick = {}, enabled = enabled)
}
Next, let's run the desktopStoriesRun
command, you can find it in the project/Storytale
section on the right side of the Gradle panel.
If you can't find all Gradle tasks containing Storytale
after syncing, check if this option is enabled:
settings->Experimental
Once the sync is successful, run ./gradlew publishToMavenLocal
.
At this point, if you see these Storytale Gradle tasks
, it means you’ve successfully set up the project and can start contributing! :)
Before running XXXXStoriesRun
, you need to run ./gradlew publishToMavenLocal
to deploy the latest changes if you've modified any part of the code (except for examples module)
.
└── modules/
├── compiler-plugin
├── gallery
├── gradle-plugin
└── runtime
Includes the entry point of the Storytale compiler plugin and its related features.
The gallery represents the final, fully functional multi-platform application that is produced by Storytale.
All aspects related to building Storytale, including various Gradle tasks, generating Storytale apps for different platforms, and so on.
The runtime module is designed to provide developers with essential APIs during the coding process