Note

This documentation page contains information about the Storybook plugin, specifically regarding Angular projects that are using Storybook.

The browserTarget for Angular projects with a Storybook configuration

Setting up browserTarget

If you're using Storybook in your Angular project, you will notice that browserTarget is specified for the storybook and build-storybook targets, much like it is done for serve or other targets. Angular needs the browserTarget for Storybook in order to know which configuration to use for the build. If your project is buildable (it has a build target, and uses the main Angular builder - @angular-devkit/build-angular:browser) the browserTarget for Storybook will use the build target, if it's not buildable it will use the build-storybook target. You do not have to do anything manually. Nx will create the configuration for you. Even if you are migrating from an older version of Nx, Nx will make sure to change your package.json Storybook targets to match the new schema.

You can read more about the browserTarget in the official Angular documentation.

Your Storybook targets in your project.json will look like this:

"storybook": { "executor": "@storybook/angular:start-storybook", "options": { ... "browserTarget": "my-project:build" }, ... }, "build-storybook": { "executor": "@storybook/angular:build-storybook", ... "options": { ... "browserTarget": "my-project:build" }, ... }

This setup instructs Nx to use the configuration under the build target of my-project when using the storybook and build-storybook executors.

Setting up projectBuildConfig for Nx versions <14.1.8

Careful: This is for older versions of Nx - for the latest version please look at the section above, about browserTarget

If you are on Nx version <14.1.8, you're still using our custom executor, which means that you have to comply by the Nx Storybook schema. This means that the contents of browserTarget should be placed in the projectBuildConfig property. This is telling Storybook where to get the build configuration from. To know more about the purpose of browserTarget (and projectBuildConfig) read the section above.

If you're using Nx version >=13.4.6 either in a new Nx workspace, or you migrated your older Nx workspace to Nx version >=13.4.6, Nx will automatically add the projectBuildConfig property in your projects project.json files, for projects that are using Storybook.

Your Storybook targets in your project.json will look like this:

"storybook": { "executor": "@nrwl/storybook:storybook", "options": { ... "projectBuildConfig": "my-project:build-storybook" }, ... }, "build-storybook": { "executor": "@nrwl/storybook:build", ... "options": { ... "projectBuildConfig": "my-project:build-storybook" }, ... }

This setup instructs Nx to use the configuration under the build-storybook target of my-project when using the storybook and build-storybook executors.

Notes about the defaultProject

Storybook for Angular needs a default project specified in order to run. The reason is that it uses that default project to read the build configuration from (paths to files to include in the build, and other configurations/settings). In a pure Angular/Storybook setup (not an Nx workspace), the Angular application/project would have an angular.json file. That file would have a property called defaultProject. In an Nx workspace the defaultProject property would be specified in the nx.json file. Previously, Nx would try to resolve the defaultProject of the workspace, and use the build configuration of that project. In most cases, the defaultProject's build configuration would not work for some other project set up with Storybook, since there would most probably be mismatches in paths or other project-specific options.