Buttons are clickable elements that trigger an action. They can communicate calls to action, are visually prominent, and allow users to interact with the pages in various ways.
The vf-button component can be used with forms on a page and as a prominent 'call to action' link that goes to another page.
A button can be used to submit data or take action and as a link to navigate to another page.
Use the primary button for the principal call to action on a page or form. Avoid having multiple primary buttons on the same page or form.
Use secondary buttons for secondary calls to action. Pages with too many prominent calls to action make it hard for users to know what to do next. Before adding lots of secondary buttons, try to simplify the page or break the content down across multiple pages.
Tertiary buttons can be used for less prominent actions. Consider using a link instead of a button to send users to another page, if this action is not very important.
As the vf-button is relatively large, depending on the context, you may wish to use the vf-button--small variant instead.
As a general rule, the vf-button should be left aligned on the page and when used inside a larger component.
When used in conjunction with a single form input, as in the vf-search component, the vf-button needs to be inline with the input and to the right of it.
When a vf-button is used in a banner (e.g. to accept cookies) it needs to follow the content and be right aligned.
If using the vf-button as a link do not use it to link to content on the same page. Use the vf-link-list component instead.
Write button text in sentence case, describing the action it performs. For example:
Try to keep the text on the button short and clear.
The guidelines on buttons in the GOV.UK Design System and the Carbon Design System include additional advice on when and how to use buttons.
Latest Angular package (3.0.0-alpha.0) was generated with Angular version 15.2.0 and has been tested on application with Angular version 15.2.0.
yarn add @visual-framework/vf-buttonimport { VfButtonAngularModule } from '@visual-framework/vf-button/vf-button.angular';
@NgModule({
imports: [VfButtonAngularModule, YourOtherModules],
...
})
<vf-button [text]="'Primary Button'" [theme]="'primary'"></vf-button>
@import '../node_modules/@visual-framework/vf-sass-config/index.scss';
@import "../node_modules/@visual-framework/vf-button/vf-button.scss";
(you should also make use of vf-sass-starter)Depending on the success of this method, we plan to add standardized guidance to the component library and component generator.
Usage:
<vf-button [text]="'Primary Button'" [theme]="'primary'"></vf-button>
Depending on your environment you'll want to use render or include. As a rule of thumb: server-side use include, precompiled browser use render. If you're using vf-eleventy you should use include.
includeYou'll need to pass a context object from your code or Yaml file (example), as well as the path to the Nunjucks template. Nunjucks' include is an abstraction of render and provides some additional portability.
{% set context fromYourYamlFile %}
- or -
{% set context = {
"component-type" : "element",
"text" : "Primary button",
"theme" : "primary",
}
%}
{% include "../path_to/vf-button/vf-button.njk" %}
renderThis approach is best for bare-bones Nunjucks environments, such as precompiled templates with the Nunjucks slim runtime where include is not be available.
{% render '@vf-button', {
"component-type" : "element",
"text" : "Primary button",
"theme" : "primary",
}
%}
<vf-button [text]="'Primary Button'" [theme]="'primary'"></vf-button>
import { VfButton } from "@visual-framework/vf-button/vf-button.react.js";
// or
import { VfButton } from "@visual-framework/vf-button/vf-button.jsx";
<VfButton parameter="value" />
For individual parameter names and options, see the Nunjucks syntax example. Also follow the React setup guide. Note: React support is in its early pre-alpha stage and not all component are yet supported.
<button class="vf-button vf-button--primary">Primary button</button>
Depending on your environment you'll want to use render or include. As a rule of thumb: server-side use include, precompiled browser use render. If you're using vf-eleventy you should use include.
includeYou'll need to pass a context object from your code or Yaml file (example), as well as the path to the Nunjucks template. Nunjucks' include is an abstraction of render and provides some additional portability.
{% set context fromYourYamlFile %}
- or -
{% set context = {
"component-type" : "element",
"text" : "Secondary button",
"theme" : "secondary",
}
%}
{% include "../path_to/vf-button/vf-button.njk" %}
renderThis approach is best for bare-bones Nunjucks environments, such as precompiled templates with the Nunjucks slim runtime where include is not be available.
{% render '@vf-button', {
"component-type" : "element",
"text" : "Secondary button",
"theme" : "secondary",
}
%}
<vf-button [text]="'Secondary Button'" [theme]="'secondary'"></vf-button>
import { VfButton } from "@visual-framework/vf-button/vf-button.react.js";
// or
import { VfButton } from "@visual-framework/vf-button/vf-button.jsx";
<VfButton parameter="value" />
For individual parameter names and options, see the Nunjucks syntax example. Also follow the React setup guide. Note: React support is in its early pre-alpha stage and not all component are yet supported.
<button class="vf-button vf-button--secondary">Secondary button</button>
Depending on your environment you'll want to use render or include. As a rule of thumb: server-side use include, precompiled browser use render. If you're using vf-eleventy you should use include.
includeYou'll need to pass a context object from your code or Yaml file (example), as well as the path to the Nunjucks template. Nunjucks' include is an abstraction of render and provides some additional portability.
{% set context fromYourYamlFile %}
- or -
{% set context = {
"component-type" : "element",
"text" : "Tertiary button",
"theme" : "tertiary",
}
%}
{% include "../path_to/vf-button/vf-button.njk" %}
renderThis approach is best for bare-bones Nunjucks environments, such as precompiled templates with the Nunjucks slim runtime where include is not be available.
{% render '@vf-button', {
"component-type" : "element",
"text" : "Tertiary button",
"theme" : "tertiary",
}
%}
<vf-button [text]="'Tertiary Button'" [theme]="'tertiary'"></vf-button>
import { VfButton } from "@visual-framework/vf-button/vf-button.react.js";
// or
import { VfButton } from "@visual-framework/vf-button/vf-button.jsx";
<VfButton parameter="value" />
For individual parameter names and options, see the Nunjucks syntax example. Also follow the React setup guide. Note: React support is in its early pre-alpha stage and not all component are yet supported.
<button class="vf-button vf-button--tertiary">Tertiary button</button>
Depending on your environment you'll want to use render or include. As a rule of thumb: server-side use include, precompiled browser use render. If you're using vf-eleventy you should use include.
includeYou'll need to pass a context object from your code or Yaml file (example), as well as the path to the Nunjucks template. Nunjucks' include is an abstraction of render and provides some additional portability.
{% set context fromYourYamlFile %}
- or -
{% set context = {
"component-type" : "element",
"text" : "Small button",
"theme" : "primary",
"size" : "sm",
}
%}
{% include "../path_to/vf-button/vf-button.njk" %}
renderThis approach is best for bare-bones Nunjucks environments, such as precompiled templates with the Nunjucks slim runtime where include is not be available.
{% render '@vf-button', {
"component-type" : "element",
"text" : "Small button",
"theme" : "primary",
"size" : "sm",
}
%}
<vf-button [text]="'Small Button'" [theme]="'primary'" size="sm"></vf-button>
import { VfButton } from "@visual-framework/vf-button/vf-button.react.js";
// or
import { VfButton } from "@visual-framework/vf-button/vf-button.jsx";
<VfButton parameter="value" />
For individual parameter names and options, see the Nunjucks syntax example. Also follow the React setup guide. Note: React support is in its early pre-alpha stage and not all component are yet supported.
<button class="vf-button vf-button--primary vf-button--sm ">Small button</button>
Depending on your environment you'll want to use render or include. As a rule of thumb: server-side use include, precompiled browser use render. If you're using vf-eleventy you should use include.
includeYou'll need to pass a context object from your code or Yaml file (example), as well as the path to the Nunjucks template. Nunjucks' include is an abstraction of render and provides some additional portability.
{% set context fromYourYamlFile %}
- or -
{% set context = {
"component-type" : "element",
"text" : "a link variant",
"theme" : "link",
}
%}
{% include "../path_to/vf-button/vf-button.njk" %}
renderThis approach is best for bare-bones Nunjucks environments, such as precompiled templates with the Nunjucks slim runtime where include is not be available.
{% render '@vf-button', {
"component-type" : "element",
"text" : "a link variant",
"theme" : "link",
}
%}
<vf-button [text]="'a link variant'" [theme]="'link'"></vf-button>
import { VfButton } from "@visual-framework/vf-button/vf-button.react.js";
// or
import { VfButton } from "@visual-framework/vf-button/vf-button.jsx";
<VfButton parameter="value" />
For individual parameter names and options, see the Nunjucks syntax example. Also follow the React setup guide. Note: React support is in its early pre-alpha stage and not all component are yet supported.
<button class="vf-button vf-button--link">a link variant</button>
This component is distributed with npm. After installing npm, you can install the vf-button with this command.
$ yarn add --dev @visual-framework/vf-button
The source files included are written in Sass(scss). You can point your Sass include-path at your node_modules directory and import it like this.
@import "@visual-framework/vf-button/index.scss";
Make sure you import Sass requirements along with the modules. You can use a project boilerplate or the vf-sass-starter
@visual-framework@vf-sass-config@2.6.1.set-type mixin.link theme button variant. This variant is similar to link style.set- style functions to cleaner versionv2.0.0 of the vf-design-tokens package or newerwebkit-appearance: none; as needed for Safari browsers as autoprefixer is not doing this:hover text color rule so that it doesn't to white on hover
File system location: components/vf-button
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