Prototype of a CLI for Angular 2 applications based on the ember-cli project.
This project is very much still a work in progress.
We still have a long way before getting out of our alpha stage. If you wish to collaborate while the project is still young, check out our issue list.
The generated project has dependencies that require Node 4 or greater.
npm install -g angular-cli
ng --help
ng new PROJECT_NAME
cd PROJECT_NAME
ng serve
Navigate to [http://localhost:4200/]
. The app will automatically reload if you change any of the source files.
You can use the ng generate
(or just ng g
) command to generate Angular components:
ng generate component my-new-component
ng g component my-new-component # using the alias
You can find all possible blueprints in the table below:
Scaffold | Usage |
---|---|
Component | ng g component my-new-component |
Directive | ng g directive my-new-directive |
Pipe | ng g pipe my-new-pipe |
Service | ng g service my-new-service |
ng build
The build artifacts will be stored in the dist/
directory.
Before running the tests make sure that the project is built. To build the project once you can use:
ng build
With the project built in the dist/
folder you can just run: karma start
.
Karma will run the tests and keep the browser open waiting to run again.
This will be easier when the command ng test is implemented.
The CLI currently comes bundled with angular-cli-github-pages addon.
This means that you can deploy your apps quickly via:
git commit -a -m "final tweaks before deployment - what could go wrong?"
ng github-pages:deploy
Checkout angular-cli-github-pages addon docs for more info.
This project is currently a prototype so there are many known issues. Just to mention a few:
- All blueprints/scaffolds are in TypeScript only, in the future blueprints in all dialects officially supported by Angular will be available.
- On Windows you need to run the
build
andserve
commands with Admin permissions, otherwise the performance is not good. - Protractor integration is missing.
- The initial installation as well as
ng new
take too long because of lots of npm dependencies. - "ember" branding leaks through many error messages and help text.
- Many existing ember addons are not compatible with Angular apps built via angular-cli.
git clone https://github.com/angular/angular-cli.git
cd angular-cli
npm link
npm link
is very similar to npm install -g
except that instead of downloading the package
from the repo, the just cloned angular-cli/
folder becomes the global package.
Any changes to the files in the angular-cli/
folder will immediately affect the global angular-cli
package,
allowing you to quickly test any changes you make to the cli project.
Now you can use angular-cli
via the command line:
ng new foo
cd foo
npm link angular-cli
ng server
npm link angular-cli
is needed because by default the globally installed angular-cli
just loads
the local angular-cli
from the project which was fetched remotely from npm.
npm link angular-cli
symlinks the global angular-cli
package to the local angular-cli
package.
Now the angular-cli
you cloned before is in three places:
The folder you cloned it into, npm's folder where it stores global packages and the angular-cli
project you just created.
Please read the official npm-link documentation and the npm-link cheatsheet for more information.
MIT