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add-component
Advanced tools
Generate the component boilerplate, CSS, and a shallow render test with one line.
Run
npm install -g add-component
# Generate PureComponent and shallow render test
$ add-component ${name}
# Generate PureComponent and shallow render test with stylesheet
$ add-component ${name} -c
# Generate Functional Component and shallow render test with stylesheet
$ add-component ${name} -c -f
# Generate a full redux store
$ add-component ${name} --redux
add-component example -c
Generates example
folder with the following:
index.js
import Example from './example.js'
export default Example
style.css
.container {}
example.js
import React, { PureComponent } from 'react'
import style from './style.css'
class Example extends PureComponent {
render () {
return (
<div className={style.container}>test</div>
)
}
}
export default Example
example.test.js
import React from 'react'
import { shallow } from 'enzyme'
import Example from './example.js'
it('renders without props', () => {
shallow(<Example />)
})
add-component count --redux
Generates count
folder with the following:
actions.js
import t from './actionTypes.js'
export function increment () {
return {
type: t.INCREMENT
}
}
actionTypes.js
export default {
INCREMENT: 'INCREMENT'
}
reducer.js
import t from './actionTypes'
const defaultState = {
count: 0,
}
const score = (state = defaultState, action) => {
switch (action.type) {
case t.INCREMENT:
return {
...state,
count: state.count + 1
}
default:
return state
}
}
export default users
# Define directory with components
$ add-react-component -d src Example
# Creates component with styled-components as styling solution
$ add-react-component -c styled-components Example
# Does not use summary index.js but puts component into it
$ add-react-component --no-index Example
You can define all the options in configuration file. Also, with configuration, you can redefine technology
generators, technology templates and filenames. Look into config.js
to find out what cat be setted.
If you store your configuration file by .add-component/config.js
path, you do not need any additional parameter. Just
Run the command as usual.
If you want your configuration file to have another name or be in another folder, tell the command where it is:
# Run with configuration
$ add-react-component --config configs/addcomponent-config.js Example
# Example of configuration
$ cat .add-component/config.js
const path = require('path')
module.exports = {
techsToGen: [
'styled-components',
'react',
'storybook',
],
techs: {
'react': {
fileName: 'index.js'
},
'storybook': {
template: path.resolve(__dirname, './storybook-template.js')
}
},
directory: './src',
}
In techsToGen
, you can define the list of technologies to generate. This list will overwrite the default list, but if
you include *
, the default technologies will preserve.
Note, that for custom technologies you will also need its configuration in techs
field.
To re-define the list of technolofies:
module.exports = {
techsToGen: [
'styled-components',
'react'
]
}
To save default list of technologies and add more:
module.exports = {
techsToGen: [
'*',
'styled-components'
]
}
You can define a directory for your components. By default it is the root of your project.
module.exports = {
directory: './src'
}
You can choose not to have a directory for every component but put the files for all the components into the same source folder. In this case, also configure the naming schemas for all the technologies so that all the files for different components contain the component name and do not overwrite each other.
module.exports = {
componentDirectory: false
}
MIT © Jack Hanford
FAQs
Create React Component CLI
The npm package add-component receives a total of 2 weekly downloads. As such, add-component popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that add-component 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.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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