View Components
View Component Wrapping
TL;DR: If you want to use the auto-generated Stimulus controllers and encapsulated styling for your View Components, you need to:
- Call
with_component_assetswithin yourcomponent.rbclass- Have a single top-level element in your view (if not, a top-level
<div>will be created automatically)- Put your styling within a
component.scssin your component folder – CSS selectors will be automatically prefixed to apply only to your component
            The Platform team recently released changes to teamshares-rails that allowed almost all the
            assets for a component to live in the same folder: the Ruby class, Slim template view, Stimulus controller,
            preview, and stylesheet. In order to do that, we were previously wrapping every component in a
            <ts-wrapper> tag, which served as a top-level wrapper element for the Stimulus controller
            and a generated CSS class that would encapsulate the component’s style rules. However, this wrapper element
            caused some problems in terms of styling, since it added a new level of hierarchy to the DOM. (More details
            here.)
          
Our new pattern (as of October 2024) is twofold:
            1. Opt-in wrapping via with_component_assets
          
          
            View Components no longer get wrapped by default. Wrapping is now opt-in via the
            with_component_assets class method, called within the component’s class definition:
          
class SharedUI::Demo::Component < SharedUI::ApplicationComponent with_component_assets def initialize(title:) super @title = title end end
            If you don’t include with_component_assets, the component will not receive the auto-generated
            Stimulus controller and CSS class from their folder.
          
2. Automatic application of styles and controller
            If you do enable the wrapper, the component will get wrapped with the
            <ts-wrapper> tag, which will have the generated controller and scoped CSS class applied
            to it. A component with this code:
          
component.html.slim
.bar data-controller="some-controller" .baz Some text
component.rb
class Foo::Component < ApplicationComponent with_component_assets def some_method ... end end
Will yield the following raw HTML:
<ts-wrapper class="c-foo" data-controller="components--foo"> <div class="bar" data-controller="some-controller"> <div class="baz">Some text content</div> </div> </ts-wrapper>
            Using the magic of the connectedCallback() method of web components, the
            <ts-wrapper> tag will be removed as soon as the component hits the DOM, after first
            applying its properties to the component itself. Effectively, it will appear as though the controller and
            CSS were applied directly to the top-level element of the View Component.
          
Caveat: If your component doesn’t have a single top-level element, the code will automatically create a new
<div>and wrap the contents of your view in it. This is so that it can apply the controller and CSS parent class.
            In order to make this work, we now support a special ._base {} class definition in the
            component.scss – styles that appear within the ._base block will be applied
            directly to the generated CSS class for the component. For example, if your component is called
            Foo, and your ._base class contained a style rule background: red;,
            the compiled CSS that ends up in application.css would be:
          
c-foo { background: red; }
What does this look like in practice? Check out the example code below.
Example Code
A component with this file structure and code:
/Foo/ - component.html.slim - component.rb - controller.js - preview.rb - style.scss
component.html.slim
.bar data-controller="some-controller" .baz Some text
component.rb
class Foo::Component < ApplicationComponent with_component_assets def some_method ... end end
style.scss
._base { @apply flex items-center; } .baz { @apply m-8; }
Will yield the following raw HTML:
<ts-wrapper class="c-foo" data-controller="components--foo"> <div class="bar" data-controller="some-controller"> <div class="baz">Some text content</div> </div> </ts-wrapper>
            …which, once it’s been added to the DOM and connectedCallback has been called on the
            ts-wrapper, will become this final HTML:
          
<div class="c-foo bar" data-controller="components--foo some-controller"> <div class="baz">Some text content</div> </div>
…along with the following compiled stylesheet within application.css:
.c-foo { display: flex; align-items: center; } .c-foo .baz { margin: 2rem; }