dev-toolkit
Jump-start your react
-powered Universal App
Designed for Veterans
dev-toolkit
provides you with an easy and quick way to get started with a pre-rendered & server-rendered app. After creating your starting point with the init
command, you get full customisability out of the box.
Note: Please be aware that this project will be phased out as by 2020 and I'm only making minor additions at this time. I'm happy for you to keep using dev-toolkit
if you wish and will respond to important Issues or PR-requests but they won't be my top-priority. I suggest you switch to an alternative such as Next.js or razzle.
Quick Start
$ npm install -g dev-toolkit
# Initialise a project with optional name, template, comments
# The comments explain how the `dev-toolkit` works with the template
$ dev-toolkit init [project_name] [--template template_name] [--skip-comments]
List of available templates
* used by default when initialising a new project
π Docs
π Features
dev-toolkit
is intentionally minimalist on features. It's meant to get you started quickly with a project where you will need customisability instead of mandating which technologies that you must use (such as Jest).
- SSR by default
- Ability to pre-render after webpack creates a build
- Complete control over client & server
see template docs - Start your project without bloat or guidance if you like it rough
dev-toolkit init --template minimal --skip-comments
- Full control over your server-rendered template
no webpack lock-in such as with html-webpack-plugin unless you choose to - hot-reload on client & server, opt-in for both
- Easy way to integrate any nodeHooks for SSR usage
using/nodeHooks.js
- Easy way to add webpack plugins and presets
using/dev-toolkit.config.js
- use select environment variables on client
usingimport { sharedEnvs } from 'dev-toolkit/settings'
- you can use sane if-statements, jsx-control-statements
<If condition={true}> ... </If>
will compile down to&&
-syntax
Compatibilty
Node.js 8.9.4
or higher suggested. You can use lower versions but you might not have arrow-functions or async/await support available. See Node.js compatibility table for more information.
Why No CSS by default?
The aim of dev-toolkit is to be unopinionated so that it can be useful in many different scenarios. Therefore only the most necessary dependencies are included and other additions may be provided by yourself (see the other template examples for guidance).
With CSS-in-JS solutions on the rise, it would be unwise to include dependencies for css-modules
, sass
or less
in every project that has dev-toolkit
as a dependency, it would introduce additional installation time and bloat.
Contributing
See Contributing.md