shahzaibkhalid / shaizei

πŸ›  β€” Toolkit for building & maintaining futuristic React apps.

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shaizei

πŸ›  β€” Toolkit for building & maintaining futuristic React apps.

all-contributors PRs Welcomed MIT License Version

STOP! 🚧 βœ‹

This software is still in beta stages and not ready for production use just yet. Please try it out, give feedback, and help fix bugs.

About

This repo contains several packages to develop and build scalable React.js apps.

  • @shaizei/babel-preset - This package contains shareable babel.js configuration used by the applications created with @shaizei/cli.

  • @shaizei/cli - A next-generation CLI to quickly scaffold pre-configured yet on-demand configurable React applications.

  • @shaizei/eslint-config - This repository contains shareable ESLint configuration used by the applications created with @shaizei/cli.

  • @shaizei/prettier-config - This repository contains shareable Prettier configuration used by the applications created with @shaizei/cli.

  • @shaizei/scripts - This package contains automation task used by the applications created with @shaizei/cli.

  • @shaizei/typescript-config - This package contains shareable TypeScript compiler configuration used by the applications created with @shaizei/cli.

  • @shaizei/webpack-config - This package contains shareable webpack configuration used by the applications created with @shaizei/cli.

  • @shaizei/helpers - This package contains common helper utilities for shaizei core.

Getting Started

Installation

The first step is to install @shaizei/cli to quickly scaffold an application.

Using Yarn:

yarn global add @shaizei/cli

Using npm:

npm install @shaizei/cli -g

Scaffolding a new App

React-JavaScript

In order to generate a React-JavaScript app, named as my-demo-app, run the following command:

shaizei new my-demo-app

If you want to look into the application that will be created by this command, take a look at shaizei-starter-javascript.

React-TypeScript

In order to generate a React-TypeScript app, named as my-demo-app, run the following command:

shaizei new my-demo-app --typescript

If you want to look into the application that will be created by this command, take a look at shaizei-starter-typescript.

This will generate a new application for you in current directory.

Configuration Options

Apps created with @shaizei/cli are built with sensible defaults yet very extensible at the core.

shaizeirc.json

In order to configure certain behavior of development workflow, you can play with the options in shaizeirc.json. Here's how the file looks like in a newly scaffolded app:

  {
    "typescript": false,
    "showErrorOverly": true,
    "emitLintingErrors": false,
    "host": "localhost",
    "defaultPort": 3000,
    "https": false,
    "addCSSSourceMaps": true,
    "addJSSourceMaps": true,
    "cssModules": false,
    "webpackDevSourceMap": "cheap-module-source-map",
    "webpackProdSourceMap": "source-map",
    "typeCheck": false,
    "emotion": false,
    "title": "React App | Shaizei"
  }

Please find the details of each property along with default value as follows:

  • typescript (boolean: false)
    Set this flag to true if you want to support .ts or .tsx files.

  • showErrorOverly (boolean: true)
    You'll see webpack error overlay for errors of various kinds to ease the development workflow. Turn this flag to false to get out of this default behavior.

  • emitLintingErrors (boolean: false)
    By default, linting errors won't break the incremental development builds, but if you want the webpack-dev-server to fail the build in case of any linting error, (in order to get more quick linting feedback) turn this flag to true.

  • host (string: localhost)
    Modify this flag to change the default localhost.

  • defaultPort (number: 3000)
    You can modify the default port by modifying this option. Note that if the mentioned port is already busy, dev server will be started on a different port.

  • https (boolean: false)
    You can change this option to true in order to run the development server with HTTPS.

  • addCSSSourceMaps (boolean: true)
    By default, source maps will be generated for CSS files within production build, If you want to opt-out of this behavior, turn this flag to false.

  • addJSSourceMaps (boolean: true)
    By default, source maps will be generated for JavaScript files within production build, If you want to opt-out of this behavior, turn this flag to false.

  • cssModules (boolean: false)
    By default, CSS Modules are not enabled, but you can enable by turning this flag to true.

  • webpackDevSourceMap (string: cheap-module-source-map) By default, cheap-module-source-map will be used as webpack-dev-server devtool. But you can add any other option, valid for webpack devtool option.

  • webpackProdSourceMap (string: source-map) By default, source-map will be used as a devtool for production bundle source maps. But you can add any other option, valid for webpack devtool option.

  • typeCheck (boolean: false)
    As shaizei uses Babel to convert TypeScript to JavaScript, so Babel just strips away types without any type-checking. This usually results in faster incremental builds but takes away the important aspect of TypeScript, type-checking. And the only way left is that you can check the soundness of types via your IDE intellisense features. This is not helpful always. There are two ways to type-check your TypeScript code in shaizei.

    • You can turn on typeCheck flag in shaizeirc.json by turning its value to true. This will use fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin for type-checking in every compilation. Note that this is only available when typescript flag value is true and won't do anything for JavaScript-React projects. This might leads to slower incremental builds.

    • Second option is to run the type-checking script that's exposed by shaizei. You can run it as follows:

      shaizei type-check

      This will type-check your TypeScript code and will report the errors on terminal output (if any). Note that typescript options must be true in order to run type-check script.

  • emotion (boolean: false)
    In order to add support for emotion (a CSS-In-JS library) turn this flag to true.

    • Only tooling for Emotion is pre-configured, you must add the production dependencies like @emotion/core and @emotion/styled as per need.
    • If you're using TypeScript, you should also add @emotion/core inside the types array in tsconfig.json.
  • title (string: React App | Shaizei)
    Change this option to change the document title.

Configuring other tools

You can also configure other tools in development and production builds pipelines. Click on each of the below mentioned tools to learn more about configuration options available.

Hot Module Replacement

Hot Module Replacement is already setup using react-hot-loader. However, if you want to turn back to normal behavior of full-blown page refresh whenever you make any change. You've to make a small change in the codebase:

src/App.tsx or src/App.jsx

// export default hot(App);
export default App;

Note that you might also need to restart your development server after such a change.

Opinions

Although, apps created with @shaizei/cli does include sensible defaults when it comes to configurations. But at its heart, every tool is super configurable. Check more about configuring individual tools in pipelines in Configuring other tools section.

There are some opinions, however:

  • shaizeirc.json file must exist at the root of project directory.
  • Application-specific code must live within src directory.
  • src directory must live at the root of project directory.
  • The starting point of JavaScript-React project must be index.jsx and it must live at the root of src directory.
  • The starting point of TypeScript-React project must be index.tsx and it must live at the root of src directory.
  • The only HTML file index.html in which React app will be rendered, must live at the root of src directory.
  • There must be an assets directory at the root of src and app favicon (notably favicon.ico) must live at the root of assets directory.

Note that the apps scaffolded with @shaizei/cli already follow the opinions described above. However, these rules will be validated every time you run a standard @shaizei/cli command and if you try to violate them, you'll be prompted about what you're doing wrong and what you should do to fix.

Contributing

Please take a look at CONTRIBUTING.md for more information on how you can contribute to this project.

Inspiration

There exists many other React CLIs, why another one? πŸ€”

  • Maintainable configurations
    Instead of having the configurations per project basis, I wanted to move my configurations to a centralize location (separate packages) so that I can maintain it properly. Instead of having 100 different configurations inside 100 different projects, if I fix one thing in my configuration, I'd just release a new version and then update my package in all those projects.

  • Cleaner codebase
    I don't know about you, but I strictly don't like bloated package.json with plenty of devDependencies that are directly related to configurations and not to your actual application. Also, having long scripts in package.json bloats your application that I personally wanted to clean out with shaizei.

  • Extensible configurations with sensible defaults
    We can abstract away our configurations into separate packages with sensible defaults but then how can we extend those configurations? This has been my main goal while building shaizei that all tooling must be abstracted yet it must be very extensible at the core. Therefore, all the common tools are configurable. Please checkout Configuring other tools for more information.

Contributors

Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):

Shahzaib Khalid
Shahzaib Khalid

πŸ’¬ πŸ› πŸ’» 🎨 πŸ“– πŸ’‘ πŸ” πŸ€” 🚧 πŸ“† πŸ‘€ πŸ”§

This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!

License

shaizei is released under the MIT License.

About

πŸ›  β€” Toolkit for building & maintaining futuristic React apps.

License:MIT License


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