A starter template for Handlebar, ECMAScript(latest), sass and postcss.
This starter also features a number of great software (in the words of their creators):
- Lanyon - a content-first, sliding sidebar theme (originally) for Jekyll (by mdo).
- Browsersync - time-saving synchronised browser testing, keep multiple browsers & devices in sync when editing files.
- EditorConfig - a config file for maintaining consistent coding styles.
- svgo - a Node.js module for optimizing SVG vector graphics files.
- Favicons - a Node.js module for generating favicons and their associated files.
- imagemin - a Node.js module for minify images seamlessly.
- assets-manager - a Node.js module for transfer the required files from your registry distributions to the target.
- Babel - a JavaScript compiler for es5 to es6/7.
- rollup - a module bundler for JavaScript.
- ESLint - the pluggable linting utility for JavaScript and JSX (with preconfigured ruleset by Google.
- UglifyES - A JavaScript parser, mangler/compressor and beautifier toolkit for ES6+.
- Sass - CSS with superpowers.
- PostCSS - a tool for transforming styles with JS plugins.
- Autoprefixer - adding vendor prefixes by the rules of Can I Use.
- cssnano - A modular minifier based on the PostCSS ecosystem..
- Stylelint - a mighty, modern CSS linter (with preconfigured ruleset by Hugo Giraudel).
- handlebars - a javascript template engine.
- handlebars-wax - Effortless registration of data, partials, helpers, and decorators using file-system globs, modules, and plain-old JavaScript objects.
- handlebars-layouts - a handlebars helpers which implement layout blocks.
- handlebars-helpers - More than 180 Handlebars helpers in ~20 categories.
- HTMLHint - a Static Code Analysis Tool for HTML.
- rollup-plugin-node-resolve - Use the Node.js resolution algorithm with Rollup.
- rollup-plugin-commonjs - Convert CommonJS modules to ES2015.
Install NVM. And use the latest version of NodeJS.
nvm install node
nvm use node
Go to sass-lang.com/install for installation in command line.
gem install sass
Before install sass, you should install Ruby and install Gem.
-
Clone this Boilerplate
git clone https://github.com/thecreation/web-boilerplate.git <PROJECT_NAME> cd <PROJECT_NAME>
-
Install Dependencies
npm install
-
Build the project
npm run build
-
Stay up-to-date
git remote add upstream https://github.com/thecreation/web-boilerplate.git git pull upstream master
To run separate task type in command line npm run [task_name]
.
Task name | Description |
---|---|
start |
will start all tasks required by project in dev mode: initial build, watch files, run server with livereload |
build |
builds all content and assets from src to dist . |
dev |
builds your project without optimization. |
Task name | Description |
---|---|
css |
compile all scss from src/styles to dist/assets/css folder. |
js |
compile all js from src/scripts to dist/assets/js folder. |
html |
compile all hbs files to html files. |
Task name | Description |
---|---|
copy |
copy files from src/assets path to dist/assets path. |
vendor |
copy vendor files from registry distributions to dist/assets/vendor path. |
svg |
optimize svg files. |
favicon |
generate favicons to dist/assets/favicon path. |
img |
optimize and copies images in src/images to dist/assets/images . |
Task name | Description |
---|---|
clean |
remove dist folder. |
serve |
start a BrowserSync instance. |
watch |
watchs for changes in src/ path and rebuilds parts of the site as necessary. |
All available tasks are placed in a folder scripts
.
npm run [task_name] --prod
or npm run [task_name] --production
to run task in production mode.
Everything's ready to get started right away:
npm start
- Compiles assets & html, launches development server:
- compiles styles & scripts are being compiled & concatenated
- compresses images & svgs
- builds the site & opens it in your default browser
- watches for changes and injects them right away
npm run build
- Same as above, but in production mode:
- compiles & builds everything
- minifies & compresses everything
Global variables and site metadata can be found inside config.js
. Your can make some modification in the file.
The source
directory contains your entire application code, including CSS, JavaScript, HTML.
The rest of the folders and files only exist to make your life easier, and should not need to be touched.
Below you can find full details about significant files and folders.
├── README.md # Readme file
├── package.json # Dependencies for node.js
├── LICENSE # License
├── .gitignore # Git ignore rules
├── .htmlhintrc # Settings for HTMLHint
├── /scripts/ # Npm scripts definitions
├── /dist/ # Minified, optimized and compiled files
│ ├── /assets/ # Assets folder
│ │ ├── /css/ # CSS files
│ │ ├── /js/ # JS files
│ │ ├── /img/ # Images folder
│ │ ├── /svg/ # Svg files
│ │ └── /favicon/ # Favicon files
│ └── *.html # Rendered and compiled HTMLs from hbs
└── /src/ # The source code of the application
├── /assets/ # Static assets files copy to dist
├── /data/ # Metadata associated with the site.
├── /favicon/ # Favicon image
├── /styles/ # Stylesheets source
├── /scripts/ # Javascript source
├── /images/ # Non compressed image files
├── /svgs/ # Non compressed svg files
├── /helpers/ # Handlebars helpers
├── /layouts/ # Handlebars layouts that are based on
├── /partials/ # Handlebars partials that are included / extended
└── /pages/ # Handlebars pages, one per page on the site
The code is available under the MIT license.