This React component library is published to NPM.
npm start # or yarn start
This builds to /dist
and runs the project in watch mode so any edits you save inside src
causes a rebuild to /dist
.
Then run either Storybook or the example playground:
NOTE:
Install the peer dependencies from the
package.json
before running this project.Stories should reference the components as if using the library. This has been aliased in the tsconfig and the storybook webpack config as a helper.
Then run the example inside another:
npm i # or yarn to install dependencies
npm start # or yarn start
Run inside another terminal the command and it will load the stories from ./stories
.
yarn storybook
The project imports and live reloads whatever is in /dist
, so if you are seeing an out of date component, make sure TSDX is running in watch mode.
To do a one-off build, use npm run build
or yarn build
.
To run tests, use npm test
or yarn test
.
Code quality is set up for you with prettier
, husky
, and lint-staged
. Adjust the respective fields in package.json
accordingly.
Jest tests are set up to run with npm test
or yarn test
.
Calculates the real cost of your library using size-limit with npm run size
and visulize it with npm run analyze
.
This is the folder structure we set up for you:
/example
index.html
index.tsx # test your component here in a demo app
package.json
tsconfig.json
/src
index.tsx # Main file to export the components
/test # Jest tests
/stories # Stories for the components
/.storybook # Storybook consfiguration files
main.js
preview.js
.gitignore
package.json
README.md
tsconfig.json
react-testing-library
is already set up and configured.
tsconfig.json
is set up to interpret dom
and esnext
types, as well as react
for jsx
.
Two actions are added by default:
chromatic
which publishes the stories to Chromatic using the token.main
which installs deps w/ cache, lints, tests, and builds on all pushes against a Node and OS matrixsize
which comments cost comparison of your library on every pull request using size-limit
CJS, ESModules, and UMD module formats are supported.
The appropriate paths are configured in package.json
and dist/index.js
accordingly.
Per Palmer Group guidelines, always use named exports. Code split inside your React app instead of your React library.
For vanilla CSS, you can include it at the root directory and add it to the files
section in your package.json
, so that it can be imported separately by your users and run through their bundler's loader.# design-system