If you've made it this far, **thank you**! We appreciate your contribution, and hope that this document helps you along the way. If you have any questions or problems, don't hesitate to [file an issue](https://github.com/primer/css/issues/new).
Primer CSS is published to [npm] as [@primer/css]. Each of Primer CSS's "modules" lives in a subfolder under `src/` with an `index.scss` in it. Generally speaking, the styles are divided into three primary themes:
* **Core** styles (in `core/`) are common dependencies, which include support variables, native element and typography styles, buttons, navigation, tooltips, etc.
* **Product** styles (in `product/`) are specific to github.com, and include components such as avatars, labels, markdown styles, popovers, and progress indicators.
* **Marketing** styles (in `marketing/`) are specific to GitHub marketing efforts, including international and event-focused sites as well as the more design-heavy feature pages on github.com. Marketing styles include new colors and button styles, and extend the core typography and whitespace scales.
### Paths
Here's what you need to know about how the files are structured in both git and in the published npm module:
* In git, all of the SCSS source files live in the `src/` directory.
* When published, all of the files in `src/` are "hoisted" to the package root so that you can import, say, utilities with:
* All bundle interdependencies within Primer CSS are defined as relative imports (e.g. with `../`), so everything should work fine as long as the `@primer/css` directory is in one of your Sass include paths (i.e. `node_modules`).
The Primer CSS docs are built with React using [Primer Components](https://primer.style/components) and automatically deployed on every push to this repo using our [primer/deploy action](/primer/deploy). You can run the server locally with:
:rotating_light: **Warning:** Next.js has a [long-running issue](https://github.com/zeit/next.js/issues/1189) with trailing slashes in URLs. Avoid visiting `http://localhost:3000/` if possible, as this may cause your development server to fail in less-than-graceful ways.
The [pages directory](./pages/) contains all of the documentation files that map to URLs on the site. Because we host the site at `primer.style/css` (and because of the way that Now's path aliasing feature works), we nest all of our documentation under the [css subdirectory](./pages/css).
This script includes some exceptions for URLs that have been intentionally moved or removed in the process of moving away from the [GitHub Style Guide](https://styleguide.github.com/primer/), and which you will need to modify if you rename or remove either Markdown docs or their `path` frontmatter. See [#641](https://github.com/primer/css/pull/641) for more information.
To borrow a [metaphor from Brad Frost](http://bradfrost.com/blog/post/the-workshop-and-the-storefront/), the [docs site](#docs-site) is Primer CSS's storefront, and [Storybook] is its workshop.
Our Storybook setup allows you to view every HTML code block in Primer CSS's Markdown docs in isolation. To get started, run the Storybook server with:
All `html` fenced code blocks in `src/**/*.md` will be rendered as stories and listed under the relevant module's name in the left-hand nav. File changes should trigger a live reload automatically (after a brief delay).
*`test-urls` compares a (pre-generated) list of paths from the [Primer Style Guide](https://styleguide.github.com/primer/) to files in `pages/css`, and lets us know if we've inadvertently deleted or renamed anything.
*`test-migrate` tests the [`primer-migrate`](MIGRATING.md#primer-migrate) command line utility.
*`watch` runs the sync script in watch mode, copying files as they're changed from `src/` to `pages/css/`.