
Security News
Python Adopts Standard Lock File Format for Reproducible Installs
Python has adopted a standardized lock file format to improve reproducibility, security, and tool interoperability across the packaging ecosystem.
dash-components-archetype
Advanced tools
A [Builder](https://github.com/FormidableLabs/builder) Archetype for Dash components suites
This is a Builder archetype for Dash component suites. It defines build- and test configuration, as well as development scripts and a convenient way to generate a new component suite project with all the necessary boilerplate.
$ npm install -g builder-init
$ builder-init dash-components-archetype
Answer the prompts, then:
$ cd [YOUR-COMPONENT-SUITE-NAME]
$ npm install
If your component suite project has a demo/
directory following the same
structure as the init/demo
directory in this archetype, you can
start up a demo development server:
$ builder run demo
$ open http://localhost:9000
This lets you see a demo of the rendered components. You have to maintain the
list of components in demo/Demo.react.js
.
To run lint:
$ npm test
TODO: ESLint is not reporting problems https://github.com/plotly/dash-components-archetype/issues/15
The best way to test your components in the real Dash context is by linking into
dash2
and testing them from there.
Prepare your component suite module by linking and watching for changes
# Symlink module
$ npm link
# Transpile components to `lib/` and watch for changes
$ npm start
Link module into dash2
project
# In the `dash2/renderer` project directory:
$ npm link [YOUR-COMPONENT-SUITE-NAME]
Now you should be able to restart the webpack process (in dash2/renderer
:
ctrl-c
, npm start
), after which webpack will automatically pick up new
changes to the component suite.
You can override any npm
script in the archetype with your own implementation.
To see the list of supported scripts, run ./node_modules/bin/builder run
. For
more details, see Builder Archetypes.
To tag and release a new version of the archetype, follow these instructions.
You might be tempted to add some of these steps to NPM's *version
lifecycle
methods, but that would interfere with versioning and publishing of the actual
project depending on the archetype, since Builder merges the project
package.json scripts with the archetype's package.json scripts.
# 1. Bump package.json `version` according to [semver][]
vi package.json
# 2. Generate `dev/*` package files
node_modules/.bin/builder-support gen-dev
# 3. Run tests
npm run builder:check
# 4. Commit and tag
git add package.json dev
git commit -m "vx.x.x"
git tag -a "vx.x.x" -m "vx.x.x"
git push --follow-tags
5. Publish main and dev package
npm publish && cd dev && npm publish && cd -
FAQs
A [Builder](https://github.com/FormidableLabs/builder) Archetype for Dash components suites
The npm package dash-components-archetype receives a total of 16 weekly downloads. As such, dash-components-archetype popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that dash-components-archetype 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.
Security News
Python has adopted a standardized lock file format to improve reproducibility, security, and tool interoperability across the packaging ecosystem.
Security News
OpenGrep has restored fingerprint and metavariable support in JSON and SARIF outputs, making static analysis more effective for CI/CD security automation.
Security News
Security experts warn that recent classification changes obscure the true scope of the NVD backlog as CVE volume hits all-time highs.