You diverged from the boilerplate on Dec 06 2019. See what's been added since then. <= will only work if both repos are on github
Original Boilerplate: https://github.com/chrisvfritz/vue-enterprise-boilerplate
This is an ever-evolving, very opinionated architecture and dev environment for new Vue SPA projects using Vue CLI 3. Questions, feedback, and for now, even bikeshedding are welcome. 😄 If you'd like to increase the time I can spend on this project, as well as other Vue resources, please consider becoming a sponsor on Patreon. 🙏
- Thorough documentation: Written with the same care as Vue's core docs to quickly train new team members and consolidate knowledge.
- Guaranteed consistency: Opinionated linting for Vue, JavaScript/JSON, SCSS, and Markdown, integrated into Visual Studio Code and run against staged files on pre-commit.
- First-class tests: Practice test-driven development with both unit and end-to-end tests. Unit tests with Jest live as first-class citizens alongside your source files, while Cypress provides reliable end-to-end tests in an intuitive GUI for development.
- Speedy development: Between configurable generators, handy aliases, and global base components, your productivity will skyrocket.
- integration of ArcGIS API 4.X: Webpack does integrate the API in the output, not as a bundle but at least taking only the necessary files from the API to run the application (the one imported through the app). Does not rely on the CDN in production. (the first commit of this repo is not purely the boilerplate, the integration of the API has been done already)
# 1. Clone the repository.
git clone https://YOUR_USERNAME@bitbucket.org/esriaustralia/qld-esriau-vuejs-arcgis-api-boilerplate.git my-new-project
# 2. Enter your newly-cloned folder.
cd my-new-project
# 3. Install dependencies. Make sure yarn is installed: https://yarnpkg.com/lang/en/docs/install
yarn
This project includes a docs
folder with more details on:
- Setup and development
- Architecture
- Languages and technologies
- Routing, layouts, and views
- State management
- Tests and mocking the API
- Linting and formatting
- Editor integration
- Building and deploying to production
- Troubleshooting
Why would I use this boilerplate instead of generating a new project with Vue CLI directly?
Vue CLI aims for flexibility, making it as simple as possible for any team to set up a new project, no matter how big or small, whether it's an app or a library, or what languages and technologies are being used.
This boilerplate makes more assumptions. It assumes you're building a large app, possibly developed by a large team. It also makes a lot of default choices for you, based on what tends to work well for large, enterprise projects. At the same time, it aims to educate and empower users to configure these defaults to ideally suit their specific app and team.
Why would I use this boilerplate instead of Nuxt?
Nuxt is like a really smart personal assistant, immediately making you more productive by taking care of many concerns for you. This boilerplate is more of a personal coach, aiming to educate and empower users to essentially configure their own framework, ideally suited to their app and team.
If what you're building is very well-defined, with requirements and technical challenges that won't drastically change over time, I'd probably recommend Nuxt instead. For the needs of common applications, it's more than up to the task. If you're a startup trying to prove product-market fit and your primary goal is initial development speed, that's also a point in Nuxt's favor.
Here's when you might prefer building a project off the boilerplate instead:
- The requirements for the product are very likely to change over time and you want to maintain maximum flexibility and control.
- You'd like to focus on developing skills that will transfer across any Vue project.
- You're working in a large team, so need tooling to help everyone avoid common mistakes, write in a consistent style, and avoid bikeshedding in PRs.
Finally, it's not an either-or situation. This boilerplate demonstrates many useful patterns for building robust applications that can also be applied to Nuxt apps. That means you could build a project with Nuxt, while still using this boilerplate as a study guide.
Can you build a Nuxt version of this boilerplate?
I have no plans to personally, but you can find Nuxt forks at debs-obrien/nuxt-boilerplate-project and wemake-services/wemake-vue-template.
This isn't exactly what I'm looking for. Where can I find other boilerplates and similar projects?
See the awesome-vue repo for other great projects in the Vue ecosystem.