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@pitaya-components/app
Advanced tools
Aurelia plugin which helps building faster views and provides additional utility functionality.
Pitaya Framework
This project is bootstrapped by aurelia-cli.
This Aurelia plugin project has a built-in dev app (with CLI built-in bundler and RequireJS) to simplify development.
src/
folder, is the source code for the plugin.dev-app/
folder, is the code for the dev app, just like a normal app bootstrapped by aurelia-cli.au run
and au test
in development just like developing an app.PLATFORM.moduleName()
wrapper in files inside src/
. You don't need to use the wrapper in dev-app/
folder as CLI built-in bundler supports module name without the wrapper.Note aurelia-cli doesn't provide a plugin skeleton with Webpack setup (not yet), but this plugin can be consumed by any app using Webpack, or CLI built-in bundler, or jspm.
For a full length tutorial, visit Aurelia plugin guide.
Here is some basics. You can create new custom element, custom attribute, value converter or binding behavior manually, or use command au generate
to help.
au generate element some-name
au generate attribute some-name
au generate value-converter some-name
au generate binding-behavior some-name
By default, the cli generates command generates files in following folders:
src/elements
src/attributes
src/value-converters
src/binding-behaviors
Note the folder structure is only to help you organising the files, it's not a requirement of Aurelia. You can manually create new element (or other thing) anywhere in src/
.
After you added some new file, you need to register it in src/index.ts
. Like this:
config.globalResources([
// ...
PLATFORM.moduleName('./path/to/new-file-without-ext')
]);
The usage of PLATFORM.moduleName
wrapper is mandatory. It's needed for your plugin to be consumed by any app using webpack, CLI built-in bundler, or jspm.
In dev app, when you need to import something from the inner plugin (for example, importing a class for dependency injection), use special name "resources"
to reference the inner plugin.
import {autoinject} from 'aurelia-framework';
// "resources" refers the inner plugin src/index.ts
import {MyService} from 'resources';
@autoinject()
export class App {
constructor(myService: MyService) {}
}
By default, this plugin has no "dependencies" in package.json. Theoretically this plugin depends on at least aurelia-pal
because src/index.ts
imports it. It could also depends on more core Aurelia package like aurelia-binding
or aurelia-templating
if you build advanced components that reference them.
Ideally you need to carefully add those aurelia-pal
(aurelia-binding
...) to "dependencies" in package.json. But in practice you don't have to. Because every app that consumes this plugin will have full Aurelia core packages installed.
Furthermore, there are two benefits by leaving those dependencies out of plugin's package.json.
aurelia-binding
v1 and v2 conflicts due to 3rd party plugin asks for aurelia-binding
v1.If you are a perfectionist who could not stand leaving out dependencies, I recommend you to add aurelia-pal
(aurelia-binding
...) to "peerDependencies" in package.json. So at least it could not cause a duplicated Aurelia core package.
If your plugin depends on other npm package, like lodash
or jquery
, you have to add them to "dependencies" in package.json.
Run au build-plugin
. This will transpile all files from src/
folder to dist/native-modules/
and dist/commonjs/
.
For example, src/index.ts
will become dist/native-modules/index.js
and dist/commonjs/index.js
.
Note all other files in dev-app/
folder are for the dev app, they would not appear in the published npm package.
By default, the dist/
folder is not committed to git. (We have /dist
in .gitignore
). But that would not prevent you from consuming this plugin through direct git reference.
You can consume this plugin directly by:
npm i github:your_github_username/banana
# or if you use bitbucket
npm i bitbucket:your_github_username/banana
# or if you use gitlab
npm i gitlab:your_github_username/banana
# or plain url
npm i https:/github.com/your_github_username/banana.git
Then load the plugin in app's main.ts
like this.
aurelia.use.plugin('banana');
// for webpack user, use PLATFORM.moduleName wrapper
aurelia.use.plugin(PLATFORM.moduleName('banana'));
The missing dist/
files will be filled up by npm through "prepare": "npm run build"
(in "scripts"
section of package.json).
Yarn has a bug that ignores "prepare"
script. If you want to use yarn to consume your plugin through direct git reference, remove /dist
from .gitignore
and commit all the files. Note you don't need to commit dist/
files if you only use yarn to consume this plugin through published npm package (npm i banana
).
By default, "private"
field in package.json has been turned on, this prevents you from accidentally publish a private plugin to npm.
To publish the plugin to npm for public assumption:
Remove "private": true,
from package.json.
Pump up project version. This will run through au test
(in "preversion" in package.json) first.
npm version patch # or minor or major
git push && git push --tags
npm publish
You can enable npm version patch # or minor or major
to automatically update changelog, push commits and version tag to the git server, and publish to npm.
Here is one simple setup.
npm i -D standard-changelog
. We use standard-changelog
as a minimum example to support conventional changelog."scripts"
section of package.json."scripts": {
// ...
"version": "standard-changelog && git add CHANGELOG.md",
"postversion": "git push && git push --tags && npm publish"
},
&& npm publish
if your project is privateFor more information, go to https://aurelia.io/docs/cli/cli-bundler
Run au run
, then open http://localhost:9000
To open browser automatically, do au run --open
.
To change dev server port, do au run --port 8888
.
To change dev server host, do au run --host 127.0.0.1
PS: You could mix all the flags as well, au run --host 127.0.0.1 --port 7070 --open
FAQs
Aurelia plugin which helps building faster views and provides additional utility functionality.
The npm package @pitaya-components/app receives a total of 5 weekly downloads. As such, @pitaya-components/app popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @pitaya-components/app demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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