Licia is a utility library that focus on getting daily works done. Unlike other libraries such as underscore, mout, which strictly separates its functions into several categories like array, string and function etc, licia is just a deadly simple collection of over 300 micro modules dealing problems in different aspects. For example, dom manipulation, cookies, class creation, template, date format, ajax, url, event emitter and a bunch more, even Promise.
The library focus on getting things done, especially for mobile web development. You don’t need to use Zepto since there is a dom module with jQuery coding style. You don’t need to include a cookie library because a cookie module is already there. You don’t need moment, a dateFormat is good enough to handle most date related work. No need for Promise polyfill because there is already one. Same reason for micro event emitter libs. Ajax is not needed since we have not only ajax but also its Promise version fetch. You don’t need to include underscore anymore just because you want to use its shuffle function. As for mkdirp, the module that has many dependents in npm, there is no need for you to install it into your node_modules folder over and over again…
Just install licia and use it like any other npm utility modules such as lodash.
npm i licia --save
const uuid = require('licia/uuid');
console.log(uuid()); // -> 0e3b84af-f911-4a55-b78a-cedf6f0bd815
There is also an online tool to build a customized utility library, check here.
Unable to find one suitable? Fork it on GitHub, add the module and submit a pull request.
Please check Eustia Documentation about how to write an eustia module.
- Must have full documentation about usage. (example is required)
- Must have test.
- Must have typescript definition.
- Must specify running environment, node, browser or all.
- Must named with a-zA-Z0-9$ characters only.
- Must not be repeated. (e.g. leftPad is not allowed because there is already a module called lpad)
- Must within a file, less than 500 lines. (with comments and blank lines counted)
- Fork and clone the repository.
npm i && npm link
to register licia command in your system.- Create a js file named with the module name and its corresponding test file.
- Write the source code along with the documentaion and test. (documentation is the first block comment written in markdown)
licia test <module-name>
run the test. (use-b
if test should run in a browser)npm run cov
for checking the test coverage.- Update index.json and DOC.md by running
npm run update
.
Now it's time to submit a pull request:)