React Plume project archetypes that enables to create React with TypeScript projects with dependency injection and the observable pattern to manage the application global state.
Create a new project in the current folder with:
- Yarn (more reliable):
yarn dlx create-plume-react-project --template admin --projectName admin-vel
- Or with NPX:
npx create-plume-react-project@latest --template admin --projectName admin-vel
Once project is created, it can be started with:
yarn
to resolve dependenciesyarn start
to start the project
Options are passed using this syntax: npx create-plume-react-project@latest --[optionName] [value]
So the template
option can be used like this: npx create-plume-react-project@latest --template admin
Name | Default value | Available values | Description |
---|---|---|---|
template | front | front, admin | The template to use |
projectName | my-project | Any string value | The project name is used for in package.json and index.html files |
verbose | false | true, false | True to display extra debug information during processing |
targetDirectory | Current directory | Any valid absolute path | The path in which the project will be initialized with the template |
templateDirectory | The build/templates directory of the create cli | Any valid absolute path | The path in which templates will be used |
After a project is created using the archetype/template, some additional configurations might be needed.
Complete the following properties in sonar-project-frontend.properties
file :
# Exemple
sonar.projectKey=project-front-ui
sonar.projectName=My project - front-ui
A Gitlab ci file .gitlab-ci.yml
is provided in the project.
It is pre-configured to run the following jobs:
- Front UI build or Admin UI build : yarn typescript && yarn eslint
- SonarQube analyze front UI or SonarQube analyze admin UI : sonar
If the frontend project is used inside a Plume backend project :
- Copy/paste the content of the gitlab ci file in the backend gitlab ci file
- Add
cd <frontend directory>
as the first step of each job
# Exemple
Front UI build:
...
script:
- cd front-ui
...
Admin UI build:
...
script:
- cd front-ui
...
- Remove the frontend gitlab ci file
This project is supported only relatively new browsers. But anything that uses a feature that requires at least es2019 should be used sparsely and carefully.
To have a look on advanced features used by the project, it is possible to:
- In
.eslintrc.js
, uncomment the line'plugin:typescript-compat/recommended'
- Run
yarn eslint
Errors regarding IE 11 will also be raised, but at least, it enables to have a global view of what features are being used.
Valid features being used are listing in .eslintrc.js
in the polyfills
part.
A banner is displayed in non-supported browsers. This is configured directly in the root index.html
file.
index.html
uses essential main features detection to choose weather to display the banner in non-supported browsers
or not.
Opera Mini is by default not supported though it is used in some regions in the World. To support it, the best way
would be to load dynamically fetch
and Promise
polyfills if these features are not available.
To set up the development environment to work on this create cli:
- run
yarn
- run
yarn build
- run
npm link
Then it is possible to open a new terminal anywhere on the local computer and run: npx create-plume-react-project@latest --template admin --projectName admin-vel
This @latest
is important, else an older cached version of the CLI can be used by NPM,
see npm/cli#2329 for details.
To test new changes, yarn build
should be run.
Templates are fully working projects, so modifications in the templates should be tested at least by running the modified templates.
- Propose a command line interface using
enquirer
to ask the user to set interactively the options - Propose module options for the front template like
i18n
,material
,form
,session
- Use
chalk
instead of doing terminal coloration by hand - Use
execa
orpkg-install
to directly install the project