Revisiting form elements in Vanilla Framework

Lyubomir Popov

on 12 December 2022

This article is more than 2 years old.


Over the years, we’ve identified a number of areas for improvement when it comes to the basic building blocks of a form – inputs, buttons, etc:

  • Long-standing complaints that inputs and buttons are too similar and therefore hard to distinguish
  • “Noisiness” of long forms caused by the presence of borders around all sides of inputs and buttons

Last cycle, our proposal for updated form elements was discussed and approved, and in this iteration, we worked on implementing it in Vanilla, our front-end framework.

Before Vanilla 3.9:

After Vanilla 3.9:

  • We’ve reduced the number of borders (all around) to the minimum required to satisfy WCAG contrast ratio requirements for interactive elements
  • We’ve removed round corners from buttons and other elements, as part of a wider push to align better with the work of our Brand team
  • We’ve introduced subtle transitions when interacting with form elements

This update also affects components that build on the functionality of form elements, like our search and Filter component:

The updated style was released as part of Vanilla 3.9.0 release.

Version 3.9.0 has just been released. You can see the updated form elements in action here

Talk to us today

Interested in running Ubuntu in your organisation?

Newsletter signup

Get the latest Ubuntu news and updates in your inbox.

By submitting this form, I confirm that I have read and agree to Canonical's Privacy Policy.

Related posts

What to know when procuring Linux laptops

Technology procurement directly influences business success. The equipment you procure will determine how your teams deliver projects and contribute to your...

Building RAG with enterprise open source AI infrastructure

How to create a robust enterprise AI infrastructure for RAG systems using open source tooling?A highlight on how open source can help

Life at Canonical: Victoria Antipova’s perspective as a new joiner in Product Marketing

Life at Canonical: Victoria Antipova’s perspective as a new joiner in Product Marketing