Starter configuration for a project which handles development and npm packaging of a React/Redux micro application exported as a React component.
Note: We are not currently publishing this package to NPM, but rather import
ing the resulting component directly via a Github repository URL address. See Deployment notes below for more info and example code.
These instructions will get you a copy of the project up and running on your local machine for development and testing purposes. See deployment for notes on how to deploy the project on a live system.
You'll need to have node
installed on your local machine. Also, preferably yarn
(as a wrapper for npm commands) installed as well. You can check either with:
node --version
yarn --version
- Clone this repository to your local machine
git clone
- Install dependencies
yarn install
- Start the development server
yarn start
Open up a browser and navigate to: http://localhost:3001/. Hot reloading via webpack
is enabled, so you'll see live updates in the browser during development.
All development should be done in the /src
directory.
The /demo
directory contains the demo application entry point index.html
file, and mocks an application consuming the SME component.
A consuming application is expected to provide the following configuration props
passed to the SME component.
prop | type | description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
someProp |
string | What does this prop do? Fill in your details here. | ||
anotherProp |
number | Unique id of the work. |
const props = {
someProp: 'I am the value for some prop',
anotherProp: 123456789,
};
<YourComponent {...props} />
The following commands are available to the application via npm scripts
located in the package.json
file.
yarn clean
Cleans the output directory dist
, ensuring a fresh copy of files when preparing your files for packaging.
yarn start
Starts the webpack development server in which you can view your work. http://localhost:3001/
yarn test
Runs the application's tests once, and provides a coverage report.
yarn test:watch
If you prefer to keep an open watch
on your tests during development, run this command in a separate tab in your terminal/shell.
yarn transpile
This command prepares the React component for packaging and distribution. It moves packaged, transpiled files into the /dist
directory. Run this command when you're happy with your development changes, before committing a branch which you wish to push to Github or import locally.
To run the tests, with a full coverage report:
yarn test
To run tests in watch
mode:
yarn test:watch
Jest
is the configured testing framework, and we're in the process of incorporating react-testing-library
https://github.com/testing-library/react-testing-library.
There is a prettierrc
file with project coding style settings.
To create a new build package which can be imported by a consuming application, run:
yarn transpile
This will create a component package in the /dist
folder which is ready to be imported by another application.
Currently we're installing the component through a GitHub repo instead of the NPM repository, so to import the default package into your application, run:
yarn add https://github.com/your-name-or-organization/your-repository-name
If you'd like to import a feature branch you're working on, maybe called my-new-feature
, do the following:
yarn remove your-repository-name
(to make sure old files aren't hanging around)
Then,
yarn add https://github.com/your-name-or-organization/your-repository-name#my-new-feature
See the yarn docs (https://yarnpkg.com/lang/en/docs/cli/add/) for more info on alternative ways of importing packages.
- React - JavaScript component library
- Peak.js - Waveform display library from BBC
- Jest - Testing framework
Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for details on our code of conduct, and the process for submitting pull requests to us.
We use SemVer for versioning. For the versions available, see the tags on this repository.
- Your Name Here - Rock Star Developer - Your Organization
See also the list of contributors who participated in this project.
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE.md file for details