ModularAdmin is an open source dashboard theme built in a modular way. That makes it extremely easy to scale, modify and maintain.
You can download this project in 2 different ways: download zip or git clone https://github.com/modularcode/modular-admin-html.git
.
The downloaded zip file will contain dist/
folder which is compiled version of the project (with all scripts are merged together, processed styles and templates). You can use it as final result, but for development you should use aplication sources locaed in src/
folder and rebuild the project. See development.
Warning! all changes made in dist/
folder would be overwriten on application build.
Clone repository to the local modular-admin-html
folder
git clone https://github.com/modularcode/modular-admin-html.git
The cloned repository desn't contain prebuilt version of the project and you need to build it, See development.
This is the HTML version, which is great for enhancing and integrating it into other platforms and environments. AngularJS, Angular2, React and Meteor versions are coming soon.
- Last 2 Versions FF, Chrome, IE 10+, Safari Mac
- IE 10+
- Android 4.4+, Chrome for Android 44+
- iOS Safari 7+
Some of the components use the new Flexbox Layout module which is available in most modern browsers. Bootstrap4 is used as main framework. Please make sure that it's suitable for you: Flexbox browser support.
For building the application, you need to have NodeJs with npm. You also need to have Bower installed globally.
After downloading run the following commands from the project folder:
Install bower globally
npm install -g bower
Install npm dependencies
npm install
Install front-end bower dependencies
bower install
Build the project and start local web server
npm start
Open the project http://localhost:4000.
The project is built by Gulp. You can read more info in Build Tasks section
To build the container, you need to install docker and docker-compose than launch the docker daemon. After launching the daemon run the following commands from the project folder:
Build the image
docker-compose build
Launch the container
docker-compose up
├── bower_components/ # vendor libraries installed by bower
├── build/ # app build tasks and tools
├── node_modules/ # node dependencies
├── dist/ # compiled result
├── src/ # source files
│── bower.json # bower configuration file
└── package.json # npm configuration file
This folder contains our application source files. The folder structure reflects the app component structure.
Each non-underscored folder represents a single component module. Modules can be nested inside each other.
There are also special folders which start with an underscore.
For example _common/
folder contains common components that are used by other components at the same level.
This file structuring makes our app file organization very semantic and scalable. Also It's very easy to work on separate components even if you're developing large-scale applications.
├── _assets/ # application assets
├── _common/ # common components
| ├── helpers/ # handlebars helpers
| └── styles/ # application common styles
├── _themes/ # different theme versions
├── app/ # app module (dashboard view)
│ ├── _common/ # app common components
│ | ├── editor/ # wysiwyg editor files
│ | ├── footer/ # footer files
│ | ├── header/ # header files
│ | ├── modals/ # common modal dialogs (confirm, image library, etc)
│ | └── sidebar/ # sidebar files
│ ├── {different modules}
│ ├── app-layout.hbs # app view layout
│ └── app.scss # main app view styles
├── auth/ # auth module (login/signup/recover)
│ ├── {different modules}
│ ├── auth-layout.hbs # auth view layout
│ └── auth.scss # main auth view styles
├── _context.js # main handlebars variables
├── _main.scss # main styles
├── _variables.scss # variables
├── config.js # javascript configs
└── main.js # main script file
This folder contains files related to our application compilation. That can be styles preprocessing (LESS,SASS,PostCSS) and template engine compilation, script file concatenation and minification and other related tasks.
├── paths/ # application file paths
| ├── app.js # application file paths
| └── vendor.js # 3-rd party plugins paths
├── tasks/ # tasks folder
| └── {different tasks} # each file represents a single build task
├── utils/ # some utils
├── config.js # build configs
└── gulpfile.js # main build file for gulp build system
Compiled state of our app with processed styles, templates, scripts and assets.
Warning! Never work inside this folder, because your changes would be overwritten on every build
Our app consists of different file types.
We use SASS as CSS preprocessor language.
Main variables are defined in src/_variables.scss
folder.
For making life easier we broke down styles into components, and on build we're just merging all .scss
files together and processing it to dist/css/app.css
file. Style files are merged in the following order
{variables.scss}
{bootstrap variables}
{bootstrap mixins}
{rest style files}
The remaining style files are merged in the alphabetical order.
There are also different theme variations located in src/_themes/ folder
, where you can change the main variables to get different themes. There are a few predefined themes built in. You can add new themes by adding a new file in src/_themes/
folder. The file name must end with -theme.scss
.
We separate application's scripts across its components. For simplicity we use ES5 in this version, and just wrap each component's script in jQuery $(function() { })
. JS configurations are defined in src/config.js
file. On build, application script files are merged together and copied to dist/js/app.js
folder. The script files are merged in the following order.
{config.js}
{all .js files except main.js}
{main.js}
Templates are pieces of HTML files written in template engine language. We use Handlebars, which allows to have conditions in HTML, reuse partials in different pages (e.g. sidebars, footers), use loops, layouts etc.
Templates themselves are just parts of the markup, and aren't compiled as separate files. What we really want in the final output is a .html
page in the dist/
folder. There are special handlebar templates for it, their filenames ending with -page.hbs
. Each {pagename}-page.hbs
file would be compiled to dist/{pagename}.html
page with a flatened file structure.
Pages can consist of different templates (partials) which can be included thanks to handlebars partial including feature. Also each page has its context, which is a data passed into the template on rendering. That data is used in template expressions and variables. page contexts can be defined in two ways:
YAML headers (example)
---
foo: bar
list:
- One
- Two
- Three
---
and _context.js files.
module.exports = {
foo: 'bar',
foo2: function() {
// do some magic, return some string
},
list: [
'One', 'Two', 'Three'
]
}
The final result of page context is a combination of both ways. Moreover, different depth level _context.js files are extending each other and then are extended with YAML headers data. For simplicity we use only YAML headers.
If different pages have a lot of common components like sidebars, headers, footers, then it's a good idea to define a layout for those common pages, and define in page files only the content which is unique.
Layout is a page content wrapper. If the page has a layout in output we'll get page's content inserted into the layout. Layouts should have {{{body}}}
handlebars tag, which is entry point for the page content. (example)
To define a page layout you need to specify page file context's layout
variable. It can be done both with a YAML header or a _context.js file. (example).
Layouts can also have contexts and parent layouts.
{_main-layout.hbs} # main layout with doctype, head, scripts declaration
{app/app-layout.hbs} # dashboard layout with sidebar, header and footer
{app/forms/forms-page.hbs} # any dashboard page
If you need more advanced layouting with multiple content blocks at the same time you can use handlebar-layouts helper approach, which is also available out of the box.
In addition to application files, there are also third party plugin files (e.g. Bootstrap). They are managed by using Bower. Usually vendor libraries consist from scripts, styles and assets (images, fonts). The build system will concatenate and copy all the script and style files accordingly to dist/js/vendor.js
and dist/css/vendor.css
. It also will copy all assets to the dist/assets/
folder.
You can get in touch with us in gitter chat or in the ModularCode Facebook Group. Feel free to contact us with any questions, sugestions, remarks and potential feature requests that you might have.
- Gevorg Harutyunyan | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter | gevharut[at]gmail.com
- Aram Manukyan | LinkedIn
- David Tigranyan | LinkedIn
Do you have a great project? Need theme customization or intagration with back-end? Want to create something awesome? We may be available for hire. Just drop a message to gevharut[at]gmail.com and let's talk.
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