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Store FrameworkUsing componentsCreating modals using icons
Creating modals using icons

When talking about ecommerce, a modal is a popup window, triggered by an UI component, that forces users to interact with it before a certain action is taken during browsing.

Let's look at the following scenario: ready to proceed to checkout, a user browsing your store has a full cart. The user then removes an item from the product list without noticing, by accidentally clicking on the trash icon.

To your business, it's advantageous to trigger a popup window in this removal icon, requiring user confirmation to complete the action. In a lot of cases, the modal will contribute to an increase in conversion rate.

To build modals in such a scenario using Store Framework, we'll use the Modal Layout block and the icons exported by the Store Icons app.

Instructions

For this step, we'll take the example given above: let's add a modal to the icon used by the Minicart to remove product list items.

  1. Using a development workspace, open you store's theme using any code editor;
  2. In the blocks.json folder, look for the block responsible for rendering the desired icon. In our example, the minicart icon is the removal one and the block responsible for rendering it is called remove-button:

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"flex-layout.col#remove-button.desktop": {
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"children": ["remove-button"],
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"props": {
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"marginLeft": "3"
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}
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},

  1. Remove the block responsible for the icon and in its place add the Modal Layout's app modal-trigger block:

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"flex-layout.col#remove-button.mobile": {
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"children": ["modal-trigger#confirmation-modal"],
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"props": {
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"marginLeft": "3"
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}
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},

  1. Then, declare the new modal-trigger block: list the modal-layout block as its child and, according to your store's scenario, list the icon you wish to trigger the modal. For example:

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"modal-trigger#confirmation-modal": {
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"children": [
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"icon-delete",
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"modal-layout#confirmation-modal"
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]
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},

Looking at our example, the icon we wish to use to trigger the modal is the one for removal. We therefore add the icon-delete (exported by the Store Icons app) to the list of modal-trigger children. Choose the icon according to your store's scenario.

  1. Then, declare the modal-layout block along with the modal-actions block as a child of the first. You can also declare other blocks you may want to have rendered in the modal, such as a Rich Text. For example:

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"modal-layout#confirmation-modal": {
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"children": [
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"modal-actions#confirmation-modal"
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]
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},

  1. Upon declaring the modal-actions block, list modal-actions.close as its child, along with the block previously removed in step 3 to make way for modal-trigger. In our example, it's the remove-button:

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"modal-actions#confirmation-modal": {
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"children": [
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"modal-actions.close",
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"remove-button"
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]
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},

  1. Once you're happy with the changes, follow our documentation on making your theme content public to make your configurations available to end users.
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