📦 Typescript • React • Package Starter
A slightly opinionated starter kit for developing TypeScript and/or React NPM packages. It comes with a several pre-configured tools, so you could focus on coding instead of configuring a project for the nth time. From building to releasing a package, this starter kit has you covered.
👋 Hello there! Follow me @linesofcode or visit linesofcode.dev for more cool projects like this one.
🏃 Getting started
npx degit TimMikeladze/typescript-react-package-starter my-package
cd my-package && git init
pnpm install && pnpm dev
❗Important note: This project uses pnpm for managing dependencies. If you want to use another package manager, remove the pnpm-lock.yaml
and control-f for usages of pnpm
in the project and replace them with your package manager of choice. If you don't have pnpm
installed and want to use it, you can install it by running npm install -g pnpm
.
What's included?
- ⚡️ tsup - The simplest and fastest way to bundle your TypeScript libraries. Used to bundle package as ESM and CJS modules. Supports TypeScript, Code Splitting, PostCSS, and more out of the box.
- 📖 Storybook - Build UI components and pages in isolation. It streamlines UI development, testing, and documentation.
- 🧪 Vitest - A testing framework for JavaScript. Preconfigured to work with TypeScript and JSX.
- ✅ Biome - Format, lint, and more in a fraction of a second.
- 🪝 Lefthook — Run pre-commit hooks, lints staged files, executes tests, and more.
- 🔼 Release-it - release-it is a command line tool to automatically generate a new GitHub Release and populates it with the changes (commits) made since the last release.
- 🐙 Test & Publish via Github Actions - CI/CD workflows for your package. Run tests on every commit plus integrate with Github Releases to automate publishing package to NPM and Storybook to Github Pages.
- 🤖 Dependabot - Github powered dependency update tool that fits into your workflows. Configured to periodically check your dependencies for updates and send automated pull requests.
- 🏃♀️➡️ TSX - Execute TypeScript files with zero-config in a Node.js environment.
Usage
💻 Developing
Watch and rebuild code with tsup
and runs Storybook to preview your UI during development.
pnpm dev
Run all tests and watch for changes
pnpm test
🏗️ Building
Build package with tsup
for production.
pnpm build
▶️ Running files written in TypeScript
To execute a file written in TypeScript inside a Node.js environment, use the tsx
command. This will detect your tsconfig.json
and run the file with the correct configuration. This is perfect for running custom scripts while remaining type-safe.
pnpm tsx ./path/to/file.ts
This is useful for running scripts, starting a server, or any other code you want to run while remaining type-safe.
🖇️ Linking
Often times you want to link
this package to another project when developing locally, circumventing the need to publish to NPM to consume it.
In a project where you want to consume your package run:
pnpm link my-package --global
Learn more about package linking here.
📩 Committing
When you are ready to commit simply run the following command to get a well formatted commit message. All staged files will automatically be linted and fixed as well.
pnpm commit
✅ Linting
To lint and reformat your code at any time, simply run the following command. Under the hood, this uses Biome. If you use VSCode, I suggest installing the official biome extension.
pnpm lint
🔖 Releasing, tagging & publishing to NPM
Create a semantic version tag and publish to Github Releases. When a new release is detected a Github Action will automatically build the package and publish it to NPM. Additionally, a Storybook will be published to Github pages.
Learn more about how to use the release-it
command here.
pnpm release
When you are ready to publish to NPM simply run the following command:
pnpm publish
🤖 Auto publish after Github Release (or manually by dispatching the Publish workflow)
❗Important note: in order to automatically publish a Storybook on Github Pages you need to open your repository settings, navigate to "Actions" and enable "Read & write permissions" for Workflows. Then navigate to "Pages" and choose "GitHub Actions" as the source for the Build and Deployment. After a successful deployment you can find your Storybook at https://<your-github-username>.github.io/<your-repository-name>/
.
❗Important note: in order to publish package to NPM you must add your token as a Github Action secret. Learn more on how to configure your repository and publish packages through Github Actions here.
🎨 CSS & PostCSS
To bundle CSS files with your package that you intend on users to import within their own project, a few extra steps are required.
- Add your CSS files to the
src
directory. For example, src/styles.css
. - Modify
tsup.config.ts
file to include your CSS file as an entry point. For example:
import { defineConfig } from "tsup";
export default defineConfig({
entry: ["src/index.ts", "src/styles.css"],
});
- Modify
package.json
to include the CSS file as an exports
entry. For example:
{
"exports": {
"./styles.css": "./dist/styles.css"
}
}
- Now consumers of your package can import your CSS file anywhere in their project. For example:
import "your-package/styles.css";
Alternatively, if your package has a hard dependency on a CSS file and you want it to always be loaded when your package is imported, you can import it anywhere within your package's code and it will be bundled with-in your package.
tsup supports PostCSS out of the box. Simply run pnpm add postcss -D
add a postcss.config.js
file to the root of your project, then add any plugins you need. Learn more how to configure PostCSS here.
Additionally consider using the tsup configuration option injectStyle
to inject the CSS directly into your Javascript bundle instead of outputting a separate CSS file.
🚀 Built something using this starter-kit?
That's awesome! Feel free to add it to the list.
🗃️ Next Upload - Turn-key solution for integrating Next.js with signed & secure file-uploads to an S3 compliant storage service such as R2, AWS, or Minio.
🏁 Next Flag - Feature flags powered by GitHub issues and NextJS. Toggle the features of your app by ticking a checkbox in a GitHub issue. Supports server-side rendering, multiple environments, and can be deployed as a stand-alone feature flag server.
🔒 Next Protect - Password protect a Next.js site. Supports App Router, Middleware and Edge Runtime.
📮 Next Invite - A drop-in invite system for your Next.js app. Generate and share invite links for users to join your app.
🔐 Next Auth MUI - Sign-in dialog component for NextAuth built with Material UI and React. Detects configured OAuth and Email providers and renders buttons or input fields for each respectively. Fully themeable, extensible and customizable to support custom credential flows.
⌚️ Next Realtime - Experimental drop-in solution for real-time data leveraging the Next.js Data Cache.
✅ Mui Joy Confirm - Confirmation dialogs built on top of @mui/joy and react hooks.
🗂️ Use File System - A set of React hooks to interact with the File System API. Watch a directory for changes and return a map of filepaths & contents when a file is added, modified or removed.
🐙 Use Octokit - A data-fetching hook built on top of the Octokit and SWR for interacting with the Github API. Use this inside a React component for a type-safe, data-fetching experience with caching, polling, and more.
🐌 Space Slug - Generate unique slugs, usernames, numbers, custom words, and more using an intuitive api with zero dependencies.
🌡️ TSC Baseline - Save a baseline of TypeScript errors and compare new errors against it. Useful for type-safe feature development in TypeScript projects that have a lot of errors. This tool will filter out errors that are already in the baseline and only show new errors.
♾️ react-infinite-observer - A simple hook to implement infinite scroll in react component, with full control over the behavior. Implemented with IntersectionObserver.