Awesome
Webpack library starter
Webpack based boilerplate for producing libraries (Input: ES6/TypeScript, Output: universal library)
Features
- Webpack 5 based.
- ES6 or TypeScript as a source.
- Exports in a umd format so your library works everywhere.
- Test setup with Jest.
Process
ES6/TypeScript source files
|
|
webpack
|
+--- babel
|
ready to use
library
in umd format
Have in mind that you have to build your library before publishing. The files under the lib
folder are the ones that should be distributed.
Getting started
- Setting up the name of your library
- Open
webpack.config.js
file and change the value oflibraryName
variable. - Open
package.json
file and change the value ofmain
property so it matches the name of your library.
- Build your library
- Run
yarn install
(recommended) ornpm install
to get the project's dependencies - Run
yarn build
to produce minified version of your library.
- Development mode
- Run
yarn dev
. This command will generate a non-minified version of your library and will run a watcher so you get the compilation on file change.
- Running the tests
- Run
yarn test
Scripts
yarn build
- produces production version of your library under thelib
folderyarn build-amd
- produces an AMD version that works with RequireJSyarn dev
- produces development version of your library and runs a watcheryarn dev-amd
- produces an AMD development version of your library and runs a watcheryarn test
- well ... it runs the tests :)yarn test-watch
- same as above but in a watch mode
Readings
Misc
An example of using dependencies that shouldn’t be resolved by webpack, but should become dependencies of the resulting bundle
In the following example we are excluding React and Lodash:
{
devtool: 'source-map',
output: {
path: '...',
libraryTarget: 'umd',
library: '...'
},
entry: '...',
...
externals: {
react: 'react'
// Use more complicated mapping for lodash.
// We need to access it differently depending
// on the environment.
lodash: {
commonjs: 'lodash',
commonjs2: 'lodash',
amd: '_',
root: '_'
}
}
}