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@gigafied/neutrino-preset-react-mobx

Neutrino preset for building React web applications w/ mobx

  • 6.0.2
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Neutrino React Preset

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neutrino-preset-react is a Neutrino preset that supports building React web applications.

Features

  • Zero upfront configuration necessary to start developing and building a React web app
  • Modern Babel compilation adding JSX and object rest spread syntax.
  • Support for React Hot Loader
  • Write JSX in .js or .jsx files
  • Extends from neutrino-preset-web
    • Modern Babel compilation supporting ES modules, last 2 major browser versions, async functions, and dynamic imports
    • Webpack loaders for importing HTML, CSS, images, icons, and fonts
    • Webpack Dev Server during development
    • Automatic creation of HTML pages, no templating necessary
    • Hot module replacement support
    • Production-optimized bundles with Babili minification and easy chunking
    • Easily extensible to customize your project as needed

Requirements

  • Node.js v6.10+
  • Yarn or npm client
  • Neutrino v6

Installation

neutrino-preset-react can be installed via the Yarn or npm clients. Inside your project, make sure neutrino and neutrino-preset-react are development dependencies. You will also need React and React DOM for actual React development.

Yarn
❯ yarn add --dev neutrino neutrino-preset-react
❯ yarn add react react-dom
npm
❯ npm install --save-dev neutrino neutrino-preset-react
❯ npm install --save react react-dom

Project Layout

neutrino-preset-react follows the standard project layout specified by Neutrino. This means that by default all project source code should live in a directory named src in the root of the project. This includes JavaScript files, CSS stylesheets, images, and any other assets that would be available to import your compiled project.

Quickstart

After installing Neutrino and the React preset, add a new directory named src in the root of the project, with a single JS file named index.js in it.

mkdir src && touch src/index.js

This React preset exposes an element in the page with an ID of root to which you can mount your application. Edit your src/index.js file with the following:

import React from 'react';
import { render } from 'react-dom';

render(<h1>Hello world!</h1>, document.getElementById('root'));

Now edit your project's package.json to add commands for starting and building the application:

{
  "scripts": {
    "start": "neutrino start --use neutrino-preset-react",
    "build": "neutrino build --use neutrino-preset-react"
  }
}

If you are using .neutrinorc.js, add this preset to your use array instead of --use flags:

module.exports = {
  use: ['neutrino-preset-react']
};

Start the app, then open a browser to the address in the console:

Yarn
❯ yarn start
✔ Development server running on: http://localhost:5000
✔ Build completed
npm
❯ npm start
✔ Development server running on: http://localhost:5000
✔ Build completed

Building

neutrino-preset-react builds static assets to the build directory by default when running neutrino build. Using the quick start example above as a reference:

❯ yarn build

✔ Building project completed
Hash: b26ff013b5a2d5f7b824
Version: webpack 2.6.1
Time: 9773ms
                           Asset       Size    Chunks             Chunk Names
   index.dfbad882ab3d86bfd747.js     181 kB     index  [emitted]  index
polyfill.57dabda41992eba7552f.js    69.2 kB  polyfill  [emitted]  polyfill
 runtime.3d9f9d2453f192a2b10f.js    1.51 kB   runtime  [emitted]  runtime
                      index.html  846 bytes            [emitted]
✨  Done in 14.62s.

You can either serve or deploy the contents of this build directory as a static site.

Static assets

If you wish to copy files to the build directory that are not imported from application code, you can place them in a directory within src called static. All files in this directory will be copied from src/static to build/static.

Paths

The neutrino-preset-web preset loads assets relative to the path of your application by setting Webpack's output.publicPath to ./. If you wish to load assets instead from a CDN, or if you wish to change to an absolute path for your application, customize your build to override output.publicPath. See the Customizing section below.

Preset options

You can provide custom options and have them merged with this preset's default options to easily affect how this preset builds. You can modify React preset settings from .neutrinorc.js by overriding with an options object. Use an array pair instead of a string to supply these options in .neutrinorc.js.

The following shows how you can pass an options object to the React preset and override its options. See the Web documentation for specific options you can override with this object.

module.exports = {
  use: [
    ['neutrino-preset-react', {
      /* preset options */

      // Example: disable Hot Module Replacement
      hot: false,

      // Example: change the page title
      html: {
        title: 'Epic React App'
      },

      // Add additional Babel plugins, presets, or env options
      babel: {
        // Override options for babel-preset-env
        presets: [
          ['babel-preset-env', {
            // Passing in targets to babel-preset-env will replace them
            // instead of merging them
            targets: {
              browsers: [
                'last 1 Chrome versions',
                'last 1 Firefox versions'
              ]
            }
          }]
        ]
      }
    }]
  ]
};

Customizing

To override the build configuration, start with the documentation on customization. neutrino-preset-react does not use any additional named rules, loaders, or plugins that aren't already in use by the Web preset. See the Web documentation customization for preset-specific configuration to override.

Advanced configuration

By following the customization guide and knowing the rule, loader, and plugin IDs from neutrino-preset-web, you can override and augment the build by providing a function to your .neutrinorc.js use array. You can also make these changes from the Neutrino API in custom middleware.

Vendoring

By defining an entry point named vendor you can split out external dependencies into a chunk separate from your application code.

Example: Put React and React DOM into a separate "vendor" chunk:

module.exports = {
  use: [
    'neutrino-preset-react',
    (neutrino) => neutrino.config
      .entry('vendor')
        .add('react')
        .add('react-dom')
  ]
};

Hot Module Replacement

While neutrino-preset-react supports Hot Module Replacement your app using React Hot Loader, it does require some application-specific changes in order to operate.

First, install react-hot-loader as a dependency, this must be React Hot Loader v3+ (currently in beta):

Yarn
❯ yarn add react-hot-loader@next
npm
❯ npm install --save react-hot-loader@next

  • From your index entry point (defaults to src/index.* from neutrino.options.entry), import an AppContainer from react-hot-loader. The main file may be named index.js or index.jsx. The extension is resolved by Webpack.
  • Wrap your top-level React component in the AppContainer.
  • Perform the application render in a reusable function for initial load and subsequent reloads.
  • Add the hot acceptance to call this function.

For example:

import React from 'react';
import { render } from 'react-dom';
import { AppContainer } from 'react-hot-loader';
import MyApp from './MyApp';

const load = () => render((
  <AppContainer>
    <MyApp />
  </AppContainer>
), document.getElementById('root'));

if (module.hot) {
  module.hot.accept('./MyApp', load);
}

load();

Contributing

This preset is part of the neutrino-dev repository, a monorepo containing all resources for developing Neutrino and its core presets and middleware. Follow the contributing guide for details.

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Package last updated on 19 Jun 2017

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