Posted on
by Lee Moody.
Tagged with Newsletter
TL;DR: We're decommissioning the registry in favour of storybook, and later introducing a design led documentation site.
Some of the bigger Origami news since our last update:
We released a new website in beta, origami-for-everyone.ft.com, which showcases our vision for Origami.
So far we’ve added design guidelines for basic colours, typography, spacing, buttons, and a more complex pagination pattern. Unlike our current documentation this covers the why and where of using a component, as well as the what and how. Knowing why and where to use a component or pattern is crucial to using it as designed, to build a familiar and trusted user experience.
Our new website will act as a hub, bringing together tools and specialised sources of documentation. For example, demos include links to Storybook and Figma.
Curating documentation for all possible combination of a component is not always practical, there are too many permutations* Storybook will allow designers and engineers to explore all a component’s options in more depth, and try it out with their own content.
Storybook will also be the place for other in-depth documentation, such as technical readme and code-docs.
Within Figma, designers will be able to quickly pull in components and patterns as an engineer does for production. This will allow designers to create prototypes and experiment with new forms of user interface (UI) with confidence. Reusing existing UI where it makes sense to, and focusing on where they can create new value.
Our new website, Figma, and Storybook are integrated both ways. Using Origami’s new Figma libraries, a designer can jump from their Figma file straight to design guidelines or Storybook. It will also allow designers to verify that what they see in Figma is what an engineer will see when they implement the component in production.
Engineers who use VS Code (a popular IDE) will be able to use the Figma plugin to preview the design they are working on, right next to their code. The Figma plugin will highlight in a click which component the designer has used, which properties the engineer should set, and include a link to jump straight to design guidelines for more information.
Whilst we’re busy building out what’s new for Origami, we’re also working to decommission the old. This quarter we plan to turn off the Origami Registry along with its two supporting systems origami-codedocs and origami-repo-data. This will help us reduce our maintenance burden to focus on what’s new, and also consolidate our demos and documentation for easier onboarding to Origami.
This is big news. The Origami Registry is used by designers and engineers across the FT, and externally, to support our day-to-day work. During recent internal user research we found the registry is our most trusted source of documentation for reusable user interface, by both designers and engineers.
To minimise disruption, our first step will be to migrate content such as missing demos, readme, SassDoc, and JSDoc documentation to Storybook.
Storybook will then take the place of the Origami Registry for existing Origami components. This also means delving deep into component documentation will feel consistent whether working with existing (soon to be legacy) components or new Origami components.
In Q2, we’ll turn our attention to replacing origami.ft.com with origami-for-everyone.ft.com.
Deyan Dragov from FT Specialist has partnered with the Origami team to add Sustainable Views to Origami, our first fully supported FT Specialist brand. It’s been a delight having him with the team.
He’s been working with Mary Godservant to create guidelines for typography, including editorial typography, and has also picked up work to audit our use of tooltips.
We know of 3 use-cases where our current o-tooltip is used, in ways it was never designed for. This often creates an inaccessible and inconsistent experience. Tooltip is therefore a great way for us to demonstrate our new, design guideline led approach. It also gives us an opportunity to explore technical decisions around building interactive components for our new architecture.
So Deyan’s work will benefit ft.com as well as Specialist brands. That’s something to be excited about.
This month’s special thanks going to Edward Gargan. Ed joined the Origami team for a 2 week boot-camp and did some awesome work. He added the internal brand to our new site; made the brand selector work reliably; and implemented a new mobile pagination pattern – with our first use of CSS container queries!
For those who don’t know, boot-camping isn’t about getting more work done for the host team, as a couple of weeks isn’t a lot of time to get up to speed. We don’t expect our boot-campers to necessarily deliver anything, though there are exceptions as in Ed’s case here.
For the boot-camper it’s an opportunity to see how another team work, gain new skills, and learn more about Origami. For Origami, it helps create future contributors who understand Origami’s design system work and how to get involved.
If you would like to join the Origami team for a short boot-camp let us know by reaching out to me (Lee Moody). We’ll work with your team to find a mutually convenient time and chat with you about your motives, to make sure we have some interesting work lined up for your time with us ✨
A digest list of some other things that have happened in January: