Design/Archive/Wikimedia Foundation Design

'''This styleguide is outdated. Current styles can be seen at https://tools.wmflabs.org/styleguide/.'''


 * The agora was a central spot in ancient Greek city-states. The literal meaning of the word is "gathering place" or "assembly". The agora was the center of athletic, artistic, spiritual and political life of the city.

This document serves as a style and design specification guideline for Wikimedia Foundation projects. It is not a style guide for the MediaWiki software. This document aims to provide designers a rulebook for color usage, design patterns, and general styles.

In addition, the goals of the Agora project include:
 * Development of an easy-to-use toolkit (like Bootstrap, but for MediaWiki)
 * Development of a specialized and unique icon set

This document is by no means exhaustive, and should be considered a "permanent" work in progress.

Documentation

 * design Principles
 * design Process
 * Agora library elements and their behavior, see also earlier Patterns and components
 * Style
 * Size and layout
 * Color usage
 * Typography
 * Iconography
 * Whitespace (spacing and indentation)
 * Writing style
 * Suggested redesigns
 * How to give design feedback

Core engineering work
See /status for status updates, also see UX standardization

Agora styles
Explore the Agora styles in the. Agora adds skin-agnostic CSS styles to MediaWiki,

The CSS defines various mw-ui-* classes including
 * with many variations, such as 'mw-ui-button mw-ui-constructive mw-ui-big' for a large green button for the completed action of a form such as "Submit", and 'mw-ui-button mw-ui-destructive mw-ui-quiet' for a less obvious button that appears red on hover and click for a destructive action such as "Cancel".
 * for a container with a vertical "stacked" layout
 * divs, labels and input fields in this are styled consistently
 * checkboxes and radio buttons within labels with class  align better
 * several utility classes such as

The CSS is available in core MediaWiki beginning with release 1.22 in the mediawiki.ui module; in 1.23 the button styles are separated into a  CSS module.

You can use context to ensure the CSS is loaded. If you only need the buttons, add only the  module. (AddModuleStyles because you want the CSS loaded even if JavaScript isn't running.) There may be a JavaScript Agora module, load that separately.

The CSS styles are written in the LESS stylesheet language and the ResourceLoader generates minified CSS from them on-the-fly.

Now we need UX standardization

Typography refresh
The Typography refresh updates the Vector skin to to use a san-serif for most text, and serif fonts for headings.

This is currently a Beta feature that you can opt to enable via your Preferences.

People
This document is a product of the Design team at the Wikimedia Foundation