Component Development With Storybook and KendoReact

Storybook provides an environment for experimenting with UI components in isolation through a variety of different configurations. In this article, I'll show you how to get started with Storybook, highlight a few add-ons, and showcase a Storybook built for KendoReact.

I've been working with Storybook for the past few months. I've found it to be an excellent environment to test UI components in an isolated manner. What exactly is Storybook? From Learn Storybook:

The Browser Wars and the Birth of JavaScript

“Any application that can be written in JavaScript will eventually be written in JavaScript.” — Atwood’s Law, stated by Jeff Atwood in a blog post titled “The Principle of Least Power,” July 17, 2007

Before anything like an Android device or iPhone existed, desktop computers were the battleground for the browser wars. The battle involved billions of dollars invested by a number of companies, all based on the premise that whoever ruled the desktop browser market would own the internet. Today, mobile devices account for nearly half of all website traffic. Back in the 1990s, however, almost all of the action on the web came from desktop machines, and the vast majority of those desktop machines were running some flavor of Windows.