Featuring Material Design 2, Webpack (and Webpack DLL plugin for faster dev builds), HMR (Hot Module Replacement), @ngrx for state management and optional server-side rendering with Universal.
You can use npm, but it's recommended to use yarn as it installs a lot faster and has other benefits https://yarnpkg.com/ . Make sure you are using yarn version 0.16.0 or newer (check with 'yarn --version')
git clone https://github.com/qdouble/angular-webpack-starter.git
cd angular-webpack-starter
yarn
yarn start
- Angular
- Async loading
- Treeshaking
- AOT (Ahead of Time/ Offline) Compilation
- AOT safe SASS compilation
- Webpack 4
- Webpack Dlls (Speeds up devServer builds)
- @ngTools AOT plugin
- HMR (Hot Module Replacement)
- TypeScript 2
- @types
- Material Design 2
- Universal (Server-side Rendering)
- @ngrx
- store (RxJS powered state management for Angular apps, inspired by Redux)
- effects (Side effect model for @ngrx/store)
- router-store (Bindings to connect angular/router to ngrx/store)
- store-devtools (Developer Tools for @ngrx/store)
- ngrx-store-logger (Advanced console logging for @ngrx/store applications, ported from redux-logger.)
- ngrx-store-freeze in dev mode (@ngrx/store meta reducer that prevents state from being mutated.)
- Karma/Jasmine testing
- Protractor for E2E testing
- The main goal is to provide an environment where you can have great dev tools and create a production application without worrying about adding a bunch of stuff yourself.
- The goal of your design should be so that you can easily copy and paste your app folder and your constants file into to a new update of this project and have it still work. Use constants and have proper separation to make upgrades easy. If you have any suggestions on areas where this starter can be designed to make updates more easy, file an issue.
Use yarn start
for dev server. Default dev port is 3000
.
Use yarn run start:hmr
to run dev server in HMR mode.
Use yarn run build
for production build.
Use yarn run server:prod
for production server and production watch. Default production port is 8088
.
Use yarn run universal
to run production build in Universal. To run and build universal in AOT mode, use
yarn run universal:aot
. Default universal port is 8000
.
Default ports and option to use proxy backend for dev server can be changed in constants.js
file.
To create AOT version, run yarn run build:aot
. This will compile and build script.
Then you can use yarn run prodserver
to see to serve files.
There is also an option to use store-logger which outputs ngrx action history to the console.
To set your development mode store logging preference, go to the constant.js file and edit the STORE_DEV_TOOLS
constant.
Available options are logger | none
HMR mode allows you to update a particular module without reloading the entire application. The current state of your app is also stored in @ngrx/store allowing you to make updates to your code without losing your currently stored state.
The following are some things that will make AOT compile fail.
- Don’t use require statements for your templates or styles, use styleUrls and templateUrls, the angular2-template-loader plugin will change it to require at build time.
- Don’t use default exports.
- Don’t use form.controls.controlName, use form.get(‘controlName’)
- Don’t use control.errors?.someError, use control.hasError(‘someError’)
- Don’t use functions in your providers, routes or declarations, export a function and then reference that function name
- Inputs, Outputs, View or Content Child(ren), Hostbindings, and any field you use from the template or annotate for Angular should be public
For unit tests, use yarn run test
for continuous testing in watch mode and use
yarn run test:once
for single test. To view code coverage after running test, open coverage/html/index.html
in your browser.
For e2e tests, use yarn run e2e
. To run unit test and e2e test at the same time, use yarn run ci
.
Recommended Steps for merging this starter into existing project