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Sidebar & URLS

Storybook’s sidebar lists all your stories grouped by component. When you have many components, you may also wish to group those components. To do so, you can add the / separator to the title of your CSF file, and Storybook will group the stories into groups based on common prefixes:

We recommend using a nesting scheme that mirrors the filesystem path of the components. For example, if you have a file components/modals/Alert.js, name the CSF file components/modals/Alert.stories.js and title it Components/Modals/Alert.

Roots

By default, Storybook will treat your top-level nodes as “roots”. Roots are displayed in the UI as “sections” of the hierarchy. Lower level groups will show up as folders:

If you’d prefer to show top-level nodes as folders rather than roots, you can set the sidebar.showRoots option to false in ./storybook/manager.js:

./storybook/manager.js
import { addons } from '@storybook/addons';
 
addons.setConfig({
  sidebar: {
    showRoots: false,
  },
});

By default, Storybook generates an id for each story based on the component title and the story name. This id in particular is used in the URL for each story, and that URL can serve as a permalink (primarily when you publish your Storybook).

Consider the following story:

FooBar.stories.js|jsx|ts|tsx
import { Foo } from './Foo';
 
export default {
  /* 👇 The title prop is optional.
  * See https://storybook.js.org/docs/6/configure#configure-story-loading
  * to learn how to generate automatic titles
  */
  title: 'Foo/Bar',
  component: Foo,
};
 
const BarStory = () => ({
  //👇 Your template goes here
});
 
export const Baz = BarStory.bind({})

Storybook's ID-generation logic will give this the id foo-bar--baz, so the link would be ?path=/story/foo-bar--baz.

It is possible to manually set the story's id, which is helpful if you want to rename stories without breaking permalinks. Suppose you want to change the position in the hierarchy to OtherFoo/Bar and the story name to Moo. Here's how to do that:

FooBar.stories.js|jsx|ts|tsx
import { Foo } from './Foo';
 
export default {
  /* 👇 The title prop is optional.
  * See https://storybook.js.org/docs/6/configure#configure-story-loading
  * to learn how to generate automatic titles
  */
  title: 'OtherFoo/Bar',
  component: Foo,
  id: 'Foo/Bar', // Or 'foo-bar' if you prefer
};
 
const BarStory = () => ({
  //👇 Your template goes here
});
 
export const Baz = () => BarStory.bind({});
Baz.storyName = 'Moo';

Storybook will prioritize the id over the title for ID generation if provided and prioritize the story.name over the export key for display.

CSF 3.0 auto-titles

Storybook 6.4 introduced CSF 3.0 as an experimental feature, allowing you to write stories more compactly. Suppose you're already using this format to write your stories. In that case, you can omit the title element from the default export and allow Storybook automatically infer it based on the file's physical location. For example, given the following configuration and story:

./storybook/main.js
module.exports = {
  stories: ['../src'],
  addons: [
    '@storybook/addon-links',
    '@storybook/addon-essentials',
    '@storybook/addon-interactions',
  ],
  core: {
    builder: 'webpack5'
  },
};

When Storybook loads, the story can show up in the sidebar as components/My Component.

Auto-title filename case

Starting with Storybook 6.5, story titles generated automatically no longer rely on Lodash's startCase. Instead, the file name casing is preserved, allowing additional control over the story title. For example, components/My Component will be defined as components/MyComponent.

If you need, you can revert to the previous pattern by adding the following configuration:

.storybook/manager.js
import { addons } from '@storybook/addons';
 
import startCase from 'lodash/startCase';
 
addons.setConfig({
  sidebar: {
    renderLabel: ({ name, type }) => (type === 'story' ? name : startCase(name)),
  },
});

Auto-title redundant filenames

In addition to improvements to the story file name casing, a new heuristic was introduced, removing redundant names in case the filename has the same name as the directory name, or if it's called index.stories.js|ts. For example, before components/MyComponent/MyComponent.stories.js was defined as Components/MyComponent/MyComponent in the sidebar. Now it will be defined as Components/MyComponent.

If you need to preserve the naming scheme, you can add the title element to the default export. For example:

components/MyComponent/MyComponent.stories.js|jsx|ts|tsx
import { MyComponent } from './MyComponent.js'
 
export default {
  component: MyComponent,
  title: 'components/MyComponent/MyComponent',
};
 
export const Default = {
  args: {
    something: 'Something else',
  },
};

Auto-title prefixes

Additionally, if you customize your Storybook to load your stories based on a configuration object, including a titlePrefix, Storybook automatically prefixes all titles to matching stories. For example, assuming you have the following configuration:

.storybook/main.js
module.exports = {
  stories: [{ directory: '../src', titlePrefix: 'Custom' }],
  addons: [
    '@storybook/addon-links',
    '@storybook/addon-essentials',
    '@storybook/addon-interactions',
  ],
  core: {
    builder: 'webpack5',
  },
};

When Storybook generates the titles for all matching stories, they'll retain the Custom prefix.