A boilerplate to build web application using Express and React with help of Typescript. It's configured to separate client-side JavaScript and CSS bundles and your files as assets.
It's a really well-configured approach for building applications with full-stack Typescript. It's configured for Back-end development with using MongoDB as Database, ExpressJS framework for web services and Front-end development using ReactJS library with help of Typescript language and Less preprocessor for stylesheets.
-First make sure that you have a MongoDB database installed somewhere and change the configurations in src/server/configs.ts
file. the default is localhost.
In the development mode, you will have a back-end server running with nodemon and a Front-end server running with the webpack dev server. The webpack dev server which helps with hot and live reloading for Front-end. The server-side Express code will be served by a node server using nodemon which helps in automatically restarting the server whenever server-side code changes.
In the production mode, you will have only the Back-end code in server directory. Webpack will load Typescript and Less into separate directories for JavaScript and CSS bundles. Separating JavaScript from CSS helps browsers for caching CSS files.
# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/Fractalliter/express-react-typescript <app-name>
#Attention please: change the <app-name> with your prefered name for your app
# Go inside the directory
cd <app-name>
# Install dependencies
yarn (or npm install)
# Start development server
yarn dev (or npm run dev)
# Build for production
yarn build (or npm run build)
# Start production server
yarn start (or npm start)
If you are looking for typeless and pure css you can find it here
Source code for Back-end and Front-end will be placed at src directory. Server directory is for web services and Client is for UI source codes in development mood. For production mood, Webpack bundles everything inside the client directory and all the assets files at assets into the dist directory.
Typescript is a typed superset for Javascript that compiles to plain JavaScript. It's only for preventing miss-typing in development mood. In production mood it's just plain JavaScript.
Less is a backwards-compatible language extension for CSS. Less helps to write CSS in a functional way and It's really easy to read and understand.
ESLint is a pluggable and configurable linter tool for identifying and reporting on patterns in JavaScript and Typescript.
.eslintrc.json file (alternatively configurations can be written in Javascript or YAML as well) is used describe the configurations required for ESLint. Below is the .eslintrc.json file which has been used.
{
"extends": ["airbnb"],
"env": {
"browser": true,
"node": true
},
"rules": {
"no-console": "off",
"comma-dangle": "off",
"react/jsx-filename-extension": "off"
}
}
Airbnb's Javascript Style Guide which has been used by the majority of JavaScript and Typescript developers worldwide. Since the aim is support for both client (browser) and server side (Node.js) source code, the env has been set to browser and node.
Optionally, you can override the current settings by installing eslint
globally and running eslint --init
to change the configurations to suit your needs. no-console, comma-dangle and react/jsx-filename-extension rules have been turned off.
Webpack is a module bundler. Its main purpose is to capable Front-end developers to experience a modular programming style and bundle JavaScript and CSS files for usage in a browser.
webpack.config.js file has been used to describe the configurations required for webpack. Below is the webpack.config.js file which has been used.
const path = require('path');
const HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-webpack-plugin');
const CleanWebpackPlugin = require('clean-webpack-plugin');
const MiniCssExtractPlugin = require('mini-css-extract-plugin');
const CopyPlugin = require('copy-webpack-plugin');
const outputDirectory = 'dist';
module.exports = {
entry: ['babel-polyfill', './src/client/index.tsx'],
output: {
path: path.join(__dirname, outputDirectory),
filename: './js/[name].bundle.js'
},
devtool: "source-map",
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.(js|jsx)$/,
exclude: /node_modules/,
use: {
loader: 'babel-loader'
}
},
{
test: /\.tsx?$/,
use:[
{
loader: "awesome-typescript-loader"
},
],
exclude: /node_modules/
},
{
enforce: "pre",
test: /\.js$/,
loader: "source-map-loader"
},
{
test: /\.less$/,
use: [
{ loader: 'style-loader' },
{
loader: MiniCssExtractPlugin.loader,
options: {
publicPath: './Less',
hmr: process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development',
},
},
{ loader: 'css-loader' },
{
loader: 'less-loader',
options: {
strictMath: true,
noIeCompat: true,
}
},
]
},
{
test: /\.(png|woff|woff2|eot|ttf|svg)$/,
loader: 'url-loader?limit=100000'
},
]
},
resolve: {
extensions: ['*', '.ts', '.tsx', '.js', '.jsx', '.json', '.less']
},
devServer: {
port: 3000,
open: true,
proxy: {
'/api': 'http://localhost:8050'
}
},
plugins: [
new CleanWebpackPlugin([outputDirectory]),
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
template: './public/index.html',
favicon: './public/favicon.ico',
title: "Book Manager",
}),
new MiniCssExtractPlugin({
filename: './css/[name].css',
chunkFilename: './css/[id].css',
}),
new CopyPlugin([
{ from: './src/client/Assets', to: 'assets' },
])
],
};
- entry: entry: ./src/client/index.tsx is where the application starts executing and Webpack starts bundling. Note: babel-polyfill is added to support async/await. Read more here.
- output path and filename: the target directory and the filename for the bundled output.
- module loaders: Module loaders are transformations that are applied on the source code of a module. We pass all the js file through babel-loader to transform JSX to Javascript. CSS files are passed through css-loaders and style-loaders to load and bundle CSS files. Fonts and images are loaded through url-loader.
- Dev Server: Configurations for the webpack-dev-server which will be described in coming section.
- plugins: clean-webpack-plugin is a webpack plugin to remove the build directory before building. html-webpack-plugin simplifies creation of HTML files to serve your webpack bundles. It loads the template (public/index.html) and injects the output bundle.
Webpack dev server is used along with webpack. It provides a development server that enables live reloading for the client side code changes.
The devServer section of webpack.config.js contains the configuration required to run webpack-dev-server which is given below.
devServer: {
port: 3000,
open: true,
proxy: {
"/api": "http://localhost:8050"
}
}
Port specifies the Webpack dev server to listen on this particular port (3000 in this case). When open is set to true, it will automatically open the home page on start-up. Proxying URLs can be useful when you have a separate API backend development server, and you want to send API requests on the same domain.
Nodemon is a utility monitors for any changes in the server-side source code, and automatically restarts the server. Nodemon is just for development purposes only. nodemon.json file is used to hold the configurations for Nodemon.
Express is a web application framework for Node.js. It is used to build our backend API's.
src/server/index.ts is the entry point to the server application which starts a server and listens on port 8085 for connections. The app responds with {username: <username>}
for requests to the URL (/api/test). It is also configured to serve the static files from dist directory.
Concurrently is used to run multiple commands concurrently. I's been used to run the webpack dev server and the backend node server concurrently in the development environment. Below are the npm/yarn script commands used.
"scripts": {
"build": "webpack --mode production",
"start": "npm run build && npm run server",
"client": "webpack-dev-server --mode development --devtool inline-source-map --hot",
"server": "tsc -p tsconfig.server.json && node server/",
"dev": "concurrently \"nodemon\" \"npm run client\"",
"server-dev": "nodemon"
},
VSCode is a lightweight but powerful source code editor. ESLint takes care of the code-quality. Prettier takes care of all the formatting.
-
Install VSCode
-
Install ESLint extension
-
Install Prettier extension
-
Modify the VSCode user settings to add below configuration
"eslint.alwaysShowStatus": true, "eslint.autoFixOnSave": true, "editor.formatOnSave": true, "prettier.eslintIntegration": true
This can be configured at the project level by following this article.