Considering Angular 2 for a large project? Do you need potential i18n support? Enhanced testing support? Oh and building for multiple platforms too? Web, native Mobile (Android/iOS), and even Desktop (Mac, Windows and Linux)?
This is an advanced seed project for Angular 2 apps based on Minko Gechev's angular2-seed that expands on all of its great features to include core support for:
- ngrx/store RxJS powered state management, inspired by Redux
- ng2-translate for i18n
- Usage is optional but on by default
- Up to you and your team how you want to utilize it. It can be easily removed if not needed.
- angulartics2 Vendor-agnostic analytics for Angular2 applications.
- Out of box support for Segment
- When using the seed, be sure to change your
write_key
here
- When using the seed, be sure to change your
- Can be changed to any vendor, learn more here
- Out of box support for Segment
- lodash Helps reduce blocks of code down to single lines and enhances readability
- NativeScript cross platform mobile (w/ native UI) apps. Setup instructions here.
- Electron cross platform desktop apps (Mac, Windows and Linux). Setup instructions here.
The zen of multiple platforms. Chrome, Android and iPhone all running the same code. |
Programming Nirvana. Mac and Windows desktop both running the same code. |
- Enhanced development workflow
- Enhanced testing support options
- Prerequisites
- Usage
- NativeScript App
- Electron App
- Testing
- Framework How-Tos
- Web Configuration Options
- Feature Branches
- How best to use for your project
- Contributing
- License
- Decorators for components which reduce boilerplate for common component setups
- Introduction of
frameworks
to help organize your code for different platforms:app.framework
: your shared application architecture code (grow your app here or create new frameworks)core.framework
: foundation layer (decorators and low-level services)analytics.framework
: analytics provided by Segment- Only reports data in production build
i18n.framework
: internationalization featuresnativescript.framework
: NativeScript specific codeelectron.framework
: Electron specific codetest.framework
: test specific code providing conveniences to make testing your code easier and faster
- mocks for various services
- configurable provider blocks for easy test setup of common application providers
- tired of setting up similar providers over and over again for different tests?
- configure a reusable test provider which can be configured on a case-by-base basis
- see example here
- helpers for end-to-end (e2e, integration) tests
- convenient shorthand to reduce test setup boilerplate and enhance speed of writing tests
- are your test cases buried by multiple import lines requiring you to scroll just to get to the substance of the test?
- removes noise allowing you to better focus on the substance of the test
- provides full intellisense support
- allows your team to add unique shorthands for various testing scenarios specific to your application needs
- plays nice with
tslint
options like"no-unused-variable": true
as the api hangs off a plainObject
instead of globals- what's the value of that you ask? have you ever isolated a test with
iit
orddescribe
but didn't import those or vice versa, usediit
leaving an unusedit
now in your tests? yeah,tslint
will be all over you :/ - avoids
unused
variable warnings altogether in tests since you are always using a valid key from the shorthandObject
- what's the value of that you ask? have you ever isolated a test with
- see example here
Advice: If your project is intended to target a single platform (i.e, web only), then angular2-seed is likely more than suitable for your needs. However if your project goals are to target multiple platforms (web, native mobile and native desktop), with powerful out of the box library support and highly configurable/flexible testing options, then you might want to keep reading.
-
node v5.x.x or higher and npm 3 or higher.
-
To run the NativeScript app:
npm install -g nativescript
npm install -g typescript
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/NathanWalker/angular2-seed-advanced.git
cd angular2-seed-advanced
# install the project's dependencies
npm install
# watches your files and uses livereload by default
npm start
# api document for the app
npm run serve.docs
# dev build
npm run build.dev
# prod build
npm run build.prod
npm install -g nativescript
You can make changes to files in src/client
or nativescript
folders. A symbolic link exists between the web src/client
and the nativescript
folder so changes in either location are mirrored because they are the same directory inside.
Create .tns.html
NativeScript view files for every web component view file you have. You will see an example of the app.component.html
as a NativeScript view file here.
iOS: npm run start.ios
iOS (livesync emulator): npm run start.livesync.ios
iOS (livesync device): npm run start.livesync.ios.device
// or...
Android: npm run start.android
Android (livesync emulator): npm run start.livesync.android
Android (livesync device): npm run start.livesync.android.device
- Requires an image setup via AVD Manager. Learn more here and here.
Mac: npm run start.desktop
Windows: npm run start.desktop.windows
Mac: npm run start.livesync.desktop
Windows: npm run start.livesync.desktop.windows
Mac: npm run build.desktop.mac
Windows: npm run build.desktop.windows
Linux: npm run build.desktop.linux
npm test
# Debug - In two different shell windows
npm run build.test.watch # 1st window
npm run karma.start # 2nd window
# code coverage (istanbul)
# auto-generated at the end of `npm test`
# view coverage report:
npm run serve.coverage
# e2e (aka. end-to-end, integration) - In three different shell windows
# Make sure you don't have a global instance of Protractor
# npm run webdriver-update <- You will need to run this the first time
npm run webdriver-start
npm run serve.e2e
npm run e2e
# e2e live mode - Protractor interactive mode
# Instead of last command above, you can use:
npm run e2e.live
You can learn more about Protractor Interactive Mode here
- how to add a language?
src/client/assets/i18n/
- add
[language code].json
(copy existing one and adapt the translation strings)
- add
src/client/app/frameworks/app.framework/services/app-config.service.spec.ts
- fix test
src/client/app/frameworks/app.framework/services/app-config.service.ts
- add language to
SUPPORTED_LANGUAGES
- add language to
src/client/app/frameworks/app.framework/i18n.framework/components/lang-switcher.component.spec.ts
- fix test
Default application server configuration
var PORT = 5555;
var LIVE_RELOAD_PORT = 4002;
var DOCS_PORT = 4003;
var APP_BASE = '/';
Configure at runtime
npm start -- --port 8080 --reload-port 4000 --base /my-app/
Several branches exist with certain features integrated:
- Download a zip of the seed. (Do not fork)
npm run git.setup
- This will initializegit
as well as setupupstream
properly.git remote add origin ...your private repo...
npm run git.prepare
- This will prepare git to handle the mergenpm run git.merge
- This will fetch upstream and run the first merge (*Important)
- IMPORTANT: You will see a wall of Conflicts after doing above (a Conflict for every single file). This is normal. There actually will not be any problematic conflicts as it's just reporting every single file which both sides (
upstream
and your first commit) added.
git add .; git commit -m'ready'
. Yes, you will be committing all those conflicts, which actually are not a problem in this 1 time case.- Now you have
git
setup and ready to develop your application as well as merge in upstream changes in the future. npm install
(and all other usage docs in thisREADME
apply)- Create a new
framework
for your application insrc/client/app/frameworks
to build your codebase out. Say your app is calledAwesomeApp
, then createawesomeapp.framework
and start building out all your components and services in there. Create other frameworks as you see fit to organize. - If you don't want an integration that comes out of box with this seed; for example. let's say you don't want to use i18n. Then just delete the
i18n.framework
, removeng2-translate
as dependency rootpackage.json
andnativescript/package.json
. Then remove any references toi18n
throughout.
You can read more about configuring a remote for a fork here
npm run git.merge.preview
- This will fetchupstream
and show you how the merge would looknpm run git.merge
- This will actually do the merge- Handle any conflicts to get latest upstream into your application.
- Continue building your app.
You can read more about syncing a fork here.
If you have any suggestions to this workflow, please post here.
Please see the CONTRIBUTING file for guidelines.
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