✨ This repository is still WIP!! ✨
nx run tournament-io-next:serve
: This command starts the Next.js application in http://localhost:4200/ named tournament-io-next. The serve task is a built-in task in Nx for serving applications. It's equivalent to running npm run dev or yarn dev in a standalone Next.js application.
nx run api:serve
: This command starts the API server. The api is the name of the application, and serve is the task to start the application. The API is a placeholder as it runs GraphQL server in http://localhost:3000/graphql
nx run api:prisma-studio
: This command opens the Prisma Studio for the api application. Prisma Studio is a visual interface for viewing and editing data in your database. The prisma:studio task is a custom task defined in the workspace.json or angular.json file. It's equivalent to running npx prisma studio in a standalone application that uses Prisma.
If you happen to use Nx plugins, you can leverage code generators that might come with it.
Run nx list
to get a list of available plugins and whether they have generators. Then run nx list <plugin-name>
to see what generators are available.
Learn more about Nx generators on the docs.
To execute tasks with Nx use the following syntax:
nx <target> <project> <...options>
You can also run multiple targets:
nx run-many -t <target1> <target2>
..or add -p
to filter specific projects
nx run-many -t <target1> <target2> -p <proj1> <proj2>
Targets can be defined in the package.json
or projects.json
. Learn more in the docs.
Have a look at the Nx Console extensions. It provides autocomplete support, a UI for exploring and running tasks & generators, and more! Available for VSCode, IntelliJ and comes with a LSP for Vim users.
Just run nx build demoapp
to build the application. The build artifacts will be stored in the dist/
directory, ready to be deployed.
Nx comes with local caching already built-in (check your nx.json
). On CI you might want to go a step further.