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wootils

A set of Javascript utilities for building Node and browser apps.

  • 3.0.4
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Wootils

Travis Coveralls github David David

A set of Javascript utilities for building Node and browser apps.

Motivation/Introduction

The idea was to take all those small thing I'm always rewriting on every project and move them to a single package so I can not only stop copying & pasting them all over the place but also maintain them all together.

There are two rules I followed when I had to decide what to put and what to keep somewhere else:

  1. The utility needs to fit on a single file.
  2. It shouldn't include any specific business logic from any other project.

Information

--
Packagewootils
DescriptionA set of Javascript utilities for building Node and browser apps.
Node Version>= v10.0.0

Usage

The package is divided on 3 folders:

  • node: Utilities that are only compatible with Node.
  • shared: Utilities that can work on both browser and Node.
  • browser: Utilities that can only be used while on a browser.

Node utilities

Two notes about the Node utilities:

  1. I'm a big fan of Jimple, so all the files not only export the utility but also a service provider or a "servicer provider generator" to register the utility on a Jimple app.
  2. Some of them may depend on the others.
AppConfiguration

This is a service to manage applications configurations. It takes care of loading, activating, switching and merging configuration files.

Read more about AppConfiguration

EnvironmentUtils

A really small service to centralize the place where you read environment variables and check if you are running on development or production.

Read more about EnvironmentUtils

ErrorHandler

Listens for uncaught exceptions and unhandled promises rejections, and logs them out with full detail.

Read more about ErrorHandler

Logger

The name leaves nothing to the imagination. As you may have guessed, this is service for logging messages into the console.

Read more about Logger

packageInfo

A tiny function that reads the contents of the app package.json. This is really useful on an Jimple application where you can register it, because the returned value gets cached and it's available as a service.

Read more about packageInfo

PathUtils

An easy way to manage locations and build paths relative to those locations on a Node app.

Read more about PathUtils

rootRequire

Is basically require but the path is relative to the project root directory.

Read more about rootRequire

Shared utilities

APIClient

A really basic client to work with an API endpoints requests.

Read more about APIClient

deferred

Create a deferred promise using the native Promise object.

Read more about deferred

EventsHub

A small implementation of a pubsub service for handling events on an app.

Read more about EventsHub

extendPromise

A way to extend promise chains by injecting custom properties.

Read more about extendPromise

ObjectUtils

A small collection of utility methods to work with objects.

Read more about ObjectUtils

Browser utilities

SimpleStorage

An abstract class allows you to build services that relay on browser storage (session/local) and simplifies the way you work it.

Read more about SimpleStorage

Development

Before doing anything, install the repository hooks:

# You can either use npm or yarn, it doesn't matter
yarn run hooks

NPM/Yarn Tasks

TaskDescription
yarn run hooksInstall the GIT repository hooks.
yarn testRun the project unit tests.
yarn run lintLint the modified files.
yarn run lint:fullLint the project code.
yarn run docsGenerate the project documentation.
yarn run todoList all the pending to-do's.

Testing

I use Jest with Jest-Ex to test the project. The configuration file is on ./.jestrc, the tests and mocks are on ./tests and the script that runs it is on ./utils/scripts/test.

Linting

I use ESlint to validate all our JS code. The configuration file for the project code is on ./.eslintrc and for the tests on ./tests/.eslintrc (which inherits from the one on the root), there's also an ./.eslintignore to ignore some files on the process, and the script that runs it is on ./utils/scripts/lint.

Documentation

I use ESDoc to generate HTML documentation for the project. The configuration file is on ./.esdocrc and the script that runs it is on ./utils/scripts/docs.

To-Dos

I use @todo comments to write all the pending improvements and fixes, and Leasot to generate a report. The script that runs it is on ./utils/scripts/todo.

Windows

You can work with this project on Windows, but it only works if you use Yarn. The reason is that NPM on Windows doesn't allow you to use paths like ./scripts/something on the package.json scripts, while Yarn does.

Another alternative if you are using Windows is to use WSL.

FAQs

Package last updated on 24 Jun 2020

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