This is an educational project to learn a little about Vue3. The project is obviously based on the popular Wordle game presented by The New York Times. The game selects from a relatively short (~500) list of words to avoid selecting a very uncommon word such as "baize", profanity, words that are plural forms of base words, etc.
If you are interested in playing the actual game, I strongly recommend you go to the Times and enjoy the official game which has well thought out words, player history, sharing results with friends, etc.
Added history manager to export/import/erase game history
Replaced custom css with Tailwind
Added local storage to save current game progress. For you, Grandma!
First working game
VSCode + Volar (and disable Vetur) + TypeScript Vue Plugin (Volar).
TypeScript cannot handle type information for .vue
imports by default, so we replace the tsc
CLI with vue-tsc
for type checking. In editors, we need TypeScript Vue Plugin (Volar) to make the TypeScript language service aware of .vue
types.
If the standalone TypeScript plugin doesn't feel fast enough to you, Volar has also implemented a Take Over Mode that is more performant. You can enable it by the following steps:
- Disable the built-in TypeScript Extension
- Run
Extensions: Show Built-in Extensions
from VSCode's command palette - Find
TypeScript and JavaScript Language Features
, right click and selectDisable (Workspace)
- Run
- Reload the VSCode window by running
Developer: Reload Window
from the command palette.
See Vite Configuration Reference.
npm install
npm run dev
npm run build
Run Unit Tests with Vitest
npm run test:unit
Run End-to-End Tests with Cypress
npm run build
npm run test:e2e # or `npm run test:e2e:ci` for headless testing
Lint with ESLint
npm run lint