Porsche Design System
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Introduction Table of Contents Start Coding Porsche Design System provides developers with versioned packages of Web components, Angular components, React components and Vue components to build clean and high-quality frontends that innately come with the latest design definitions. To enable a smooth start with the Porsche Design System we have created sample projects in all common frameworks. These projects show how to install and the usage of the Porsche Design System. Furthermore, the example projects contain examples and solutions for testing. Requirements Node.js & NPM Get required npm-packages All releases of the Porsche Design System are available as versioned npm packages. Please read more about them on the corresponding docs. Web components: @porsche-design-system/components-js Angular components: @porsche-design-system/components-angular React components: @porsche-design-system/components-react Next.js components: @porsche-design-system/components-react/ssr Remix components: @porsche-design-system/components-react/ssr Vue components: @porsche-design-system/components-vue Those packages can be consumed by the following public npm registry: npm registry (https://npmjs.com) yarn registry (https://yarnpkg.com)
Global settingsColor SchemeAll color tokens use the light-dark() CSS function. Set the theme via the CSS color-scheme property: light for light mode, dark for dark mode, or light dark to follow the user's system preference.LightDarkLight DarkDirectionThe dir global attribute in HTML changes the direction of text and other content within an element. It's most often used on the <html> tag to set the entire page's direction, which is crucial for supporting languages that are written from right to left (RTL), such as Arabic and Hebrew. For example, using <html dir="rtl"> makes the entire page display from right to left, adjusting the layout and text flow accordingly.LTR (left-to-right)RTL (right-to-left)Text ZoomTo ensure accessibility and comply with WCAG 2.2 AA standards, it is mandatory for web content to support text resizing up to at least 200% without loss of content or functionality. Using relative units like rem is a best practice for achieving this, as they allow the text to scale uniformly based on the user's browser settings.100%130%150%200%