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Atomic web development - Combining the power of npm, Browserify, Rework and more to build small, fully encapsulated client side modules
Atomic web development - Combining the power of npm, Browserify, Rework and more to build small, fully encapsulated client side modules
Atomify provides a centralized point of access to atomify-js and atomify-css both in code and on the command line. It also offers a server with live-reload and on-the-fly bundling support to make development a breeze.
You can learn from examples in this repository
atomify(opts, cb)
Just like its constituent pieces, atomify is a function that takes an opts
object and a callback
function.
opts.js - Options to be passed to atomify-js
opts.css - Options to be passed to atomify-css
opts.assets - Used to configure opts.js.assets
and opts.css.assets
simultaneously (and identically). See links above.
opts.server - Options to be passed to the development server
Just like the callbacks used by atomify-js
and atomify-css
, but with a third parameter to denote the type of bundle being provided. cb(err, src, type)
where type is either 'js'
or 'css'
.
// build.js
var atomify = require('atomify')
var jsConfig = './entry.js' // shorthand for {entry: './entry.js'}
var cssConfig = {
entry: './entry.css'
, variables: {
background: '#f00'
}
}
function cb (err, src, type) {
if (type === 'js') {
// do something with JS source bundle
} else {
// do something with CSS source bundle
}
}
atomify({js: jsConfig, css: cssConfig}, cb);
If you don't need to access the bundled source simply provide a file path as the output property in your options and atomify will write the file for you.
As a convenience, you can access atomify-js
and atomify-css
via properties on the atomify
function.
var atomify = require('atomify')
atomify.js === require('atomify-js')
atomify.css === require('atomify-css')
Atomify includes a development server that provides things like on-the-fly bundling and live reload/browser sync support to make your workflow lightning fast. atomify.server(opts)
provides basically the same API as atomify
itself, with a few extra options (documented below) added in. The biggest difference, of course, is that instead of writing to a file or calling a callback function, atomify.server
responds to http requests. The server can also be configured by including a server
property in the opts
object when calling atomify(opts)
.
Just like with atomify
, the options passed to atomify.server
are expected to have a js
and/or css
field. When the entry
option of either of these is requested, the server will return the results of bundling your code. If you don't want to include the actual path to your entry file in your HTML you can also provide an alias
option field. When the alias path is requested the server will bundle using your entry
path.
You can provide server-specific options in this field.
opts.server.port - Port to listen on. Default: 1337
opts.server.open - If provided, open the URL in your default browser
opts.server.path - The path to open. Appended to http://localhost:port by default. Default: /default, which is a generated HTML file that includes your CSS and JS bundles automatically.
opts.server.url - Full URL to open instead of http://localhost:port/path
opts.server.hostname - Use your machine's local hostname (via Node's os.hostname()
) instead of localhost. Ideal for accessing pages from mobile devices on the same LAN. Aliased as h.
opts.server.lr - Enables live-reload support by injecting the live-reload script into any HTML pages served. Supports the following sub-properties.
s
. If provided as an object will be used as the ghostMode option for BrowserSync.['**.html']
relative to process.cwd()
as well as all files in the dependency graph of your JS and CSS bundles.opts.server.sync - Shortcut for specifying opts.server.lr
as {sync: true}
.. Aliased as s.
opts.server.st - Options to pass to st static file server, which is what serves all non-entry/alias requests.
opts.server.html - Override the default HTML served at /default
. Pass either a filepath or a function.
If you pass a function, you'll be passed one options argument with the urls to the bundled JS and CSS. You should insert those into your HTML, and return a string.
{
server: {
html: function html (paths, done){
// it's important to include the body tags so that the livereload snippet from browsersync can be inserted
var html = '<body>'
+ '<link rel="stylesheet" href="' + paths.css + '">'
+ '<h1>your current url ' + paths.request + '</h1>'
+ '<script src="' + paths.js + '"></script>'
+ '</body>'
// you can return an error if something went wrong
done(null, html)
}
}
}
If you pass a filepath, the bundled JS and CSS will automatically be inserted at the bottom of your file. However, you can place the strings __ATOMIFY_CSS__
and __ATOMIFY_JS__
when you want the relevant paths inserted to override this behavior.
opts.server.spaMode - When set to true
, the default HTML will always be served. This is useful for single page apps that have a router.
In order to support atomify turtles all the way down, you can also specify your configuration in package.json. Simply recreate an opts
object structure in JSON with atomify as the key. (Omit output properties if not a top level package.)
{
"atomify": {
"server": {
"lr": true
},
"js": {
"entry": "index.js",
"output": "dist/bundle.js"
},
"css": {
"entry": "index.css",
"plugins": [
["rework-plugin-inline", "src/assets"],
"rework-default-unit"
],
"output": "example/bundle.css"
}
}
}
For detailed information on configuring Rework plugins in package.json see the relevant section of the atomify-css README.
Thanks to subarg, nearly everything you can do in code or JSON, you can do on the command line. JS options can be specified in a --js, -j
subarg context and CSS options can be specified in a --css, -c
subarg context. Server options can be specified in a --server, -s
subarg context.
If you supply the --debug, -d
or --output, -o
args outside the --js
and --css
contexts they will apply to both JS and CSS bundles. When providing an --output
argument that applies to both, omit the file extension and it will be applied correctly for you.
You can also configure aliases by appending them after a :
in your entry field like -j [ entry.js:/bundle.js ]
.
Get a complete listing of options by running atomify --help
atomify -j [ entry.js bundle.js ]
atomify -j [ -e entry.js -e other.js -o bundle.js -d -w ]
atomify -j [ entry.js -t funkify ] -c [ entry.css ] -o bundle
atomify -j [ src/entry.js:bundle.js ] -c [ styles/entry.css:bundle.css ] --server [ --open ]
Any top level args (js, css, server) passed on the command line will override the corresponding configuration defined in package.json. Non-conflicting top level items will be merged with package.json configuration.
npm install atomify
7.3.1
FAQs
Atomic web development - Combining the power of npm, Browserify, Rework and more to build small, fully encapsulated client side modules
The npm package atomify receives a total of 15 weekly downloads. As such, atomify popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that atomify demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 3 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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