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A scaffold project for a Webpack based webapplication, without the overhead of specific libraries.

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Wanderduene/quickstart-webpack

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Quickstart Webpack

A scaffold project for a Webpack webapplication, without the overhead of specific libraries. It can be used to quickstart a prototype project for any kind of module-based webapplication. It has some preconfigured standards for development and production, to make it instant to use for many default use cases (i.e. loading of images, Webfonts, .sass files, .jsx files, etc...).

Technology Stack

There are no preset frontend libraries in this project.

Runtime dependencies

  • no predefined runtime dependencies

Buildtime / Development dependencies

Requirements

For development

For production

  • webserver for static content (i.e. Apache)
  • browser

Installation

First clone this project with

git clone https://github.com/Wanderduene/quickstart-webpack.git

Second, step into the new folder and remove the git remote:

git remote remove origin

After that install all the default dependecies:

npm i

Now the project is ready to use. You can start the dev server with npm run start or create a deployable release version of it with npm run dist.

Where to start?

The main entry point of your web application is the index.js, you can find in the src folder. Start your implementation here. Use the ECMAScript 6 module-system, by using import and export. The src folder contains a little demo, to demonstrate how to handle modules and resoures with import / export. Just delete all demo.* files and empty the index.js to get rid of it.

The index.html can be found in the dist folder. It's preconfigured to load the via Webpack generated module bundle. If you have static resources, wich shouldn't be loaded by Webpack, put it in here. When running a build, Webpack generates the resource bundle into this folder. The content of this folder is production ready and can deployed / copied to any kind of webserver (i.e. Apache). Node.js and npm are not needed in production.

All scripts and resources, that should be handled by Webpack, should be placed in the src folder (except for the libraries you installed via npm). In the default configuration of this project Webpack can import .js and .jsx files (install React), .css and .scss (install SASS-Compiler) files, JPG's, PNG's, SVG's and various Webfont files.

How to add React?

If you want to have a React application you just have to excecute

npm i react react-dom

to add the frontend libraries.

Then run

npm i -D @babel/preset-react eslint-plugin-react

to add the backend library for transpiling and linting JSX files.

Then add the value @babel/preset-react to the presets in your .babelrc file. It should look like this:

"presets": ["@babel/env", "@babel/preset-react"]

and add the value plugin:react/recommended to the extends section of your .eslintrc.js file. It should look like this:

"extends": ["eslint:recommended", "plugin:react/recommended"]

You're now ready to use React and JSX! Remember to use the file extension .jsx for your JSX files :)

How to add SASS

The project is preconfigured to be able to import .scss files, but if you want to use it, you first have to add the SASS preprocessor, for transpiling .scss stylesheets to CSS. Simply execute:

npm i -D sass

Then it should work.

How to add Bootstrap styles?

You can use the Bootstrap styles and grid system by installing it with npm i bootstrap. Then just import it in the main entry point (index.js) of your webapplication, by adding the import:

import 'bootstrap/dist/css/bootstrap.css';

Something else?

If you publish a project, based on this scaffold, don't forget to:

  • rename the project in the package.json
  • change the description in the package.json
  • change the author in the package.json
  • adapt the license in the package.json if you need
  • rewrite this README.md file
  • maybe use git rebase --interactive --root to squash the history of this project into one commit, so your project's history isn't bloated with stuff related to this scaffold

Reference

npm run start
  • starts the application in a development server
  • URL is shown on console
  • refresh on every code change
npm run dist
  • creates the source bundle in the dist folder
  • content in dist folder is production ready
npm run clean
  • cleans up the workspace by deleting generated sources
npm run lint
  • executes a static code analysis in src
  • show's JavaScript problems and dirty code
npm run build
  • executes clean, lint and dist in order

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