Angular Library Schematics
Create Angular libraries in no time using Schematics. Think of ng generate component
, but for libraries.
Features
- Easily generate libraries from scratch or within your existing Angular project.
- Release a build that follows Angular standards: UMD, ES5 and ES2015 bundles + typings.
- Seemless integration with Angular CLI. Your library playground will just be your well known Angular app.
- Test your library using karma + jasmine as you normally do in your Angular apps
- Support for dry run
Installation
- It's recommended to install the schematics globally because you'll likely use it to create projects from scratch where no
node_modules
is yet available.
npm i -g ng-lib-schematics
- Make sure you have the Angular DevKit dependencies to run the schematics:
npm i -g @angular-devkit/core @angular-devkit/schematics-cli
Basic Usage
This schematic will generate the library inside of an existing Angular project. If you already have a project in which you want to include your library then you can skip step 1.
- Create an Angular project using the CLI. It's recommendable to skip install now to run
npm i
only once at step 3.
ng new <library-name> --skip-install
cd
into your new project and run the schematics inside:
schematics ng-lib-schematics:lib-standalone --name <library-name>
- Install dependencies
npm i
- Import your library module inside
app.module.ts
. Your library is now just another module of your app:
import { SampleModule } from '../lib';
...
imports: [ SampleModule ]
Note: Make sure you run the schematics in dry run mode first to know upfront what this thing will do to your project. Once you get comfortable with all the changes you can run the schematics again without dry run. To dry run the schematic simply append the --dry-run
flag to the command in step 2.
Building and publishing your library
npm run build:lib
cd dist
npm publish
Important:
- If you already have an npm script named
build:lib
in your project, then you'll have to manually run gulp --gulpfile gulpfile.lib.js
to build the library. - TODO sync version
Generated files
It's important that you know what this schematic will do and how your project will look like after applying it:
- The library will live inside
src/lib
. - All your components, services, directives, etc will live inside the folder
src/lib/src
. You can safely change the names of the existing files inside this folder and go nuts building your library. - The build script will live inside
src/lib/build-tools
along with all the build utils. - A file
gulpfile.lib.js
will be created at the root of the project. It will simple import the main gulpfile located at src/lib/src/build-tools/gulpfile.js
. - New dependencies will be added to your
devDependencies
. These are needed to build your library at the release stage. - Two npm scripts will be added to thet
scripts
object inside your main package.json
file:
a. "build:lib": "gulp --gulpfile gulpfile.lib.js"
: Script to build the release artifacts of your library.
b. "version": "sync-json -v --property version --source package.json src/lib/package.json"
: Version hook to sync versions between your root package.json
and src/lib/package.json
. This will allow you to run npm version <type>
at the root of your project and still have your library version up to date.
Contributing
Thanks for even thinking about contributing. Open up issues or PRs and we'll discuss about it.
Testing your schematics build
- Fork the project
- Install dependencies
npm i
- Run
npm run watch
. This will output the schematic package to dist and watch for changes. cd
into dist
and run npm link
. At this point, ng-lib-schematics
is symlinked to your global node_modules.
- Create a dummy Angular project
ng new lib-test
- You can now run
schematics ng-lib-schematics:lib-standalone --name <library-name>
Hall of fame
Find below some of the libraries built on top of these schematics:
- Nothing here yet. Open a PR and shoot your library right here!
Credits
I took a bunch of ideas from the Yeoman's Angular library generator by Jurgen Van de Moere. Feel free to use whatever works best for you, both Schematics and Yeoman will get you to the same exact point.
Licence
MIT