Awesome
Halogen Template
Quick Start
git clone https://github.com/purescript-halogen/purescript-halogen-template.git halogen-project
cd halogen-project
npm install
npm run build
npm run serve
Introduction
This is a template for starting a fresh project with the Halogen library for writing declarative, type-safe user interfaces.
You can learn more about Halogen with these resources:
- The Halogen documentation, which includes a quick start guide and a concepts reference.
- The Learn Halogen learning repository.
- The Real World Halogen application and guide. Note that the published article is written for the older halogen v4, but the code and comments cover the current halogen v5.
- The API documentation on Pursuit
You can chat with other Halogen users on the PureScript Discourse, or join the Functional Programming Slack (invite link) in the #purescript
and #purescript-beginners
channels.
If you notice any problems with the below setup instructions, or have suggestions on how to make the new-user experience any smoother, please create an issue or pull-request.
Compatible with PureScript compiler 13.x
Initial Setup
Prerequisites: This template assumes you already have Git and Node.js installed with npm
somewhere on your path.
First, clone the repository and step into it:
git clone https://github.com/purescript-halogen/purescript-halogen-template.git halogen-project
cd halogen-project
Then, install the PureScript compiler, the Spago package manager and build tool, and the Parcel bundler. You may either install PureScript tooling globally, to reduce duplicated node_modules
across projects, or locally, so that each project uses specific versions of the tools.
To install the toolchain globally:
npm install -g purescript spago parcel
To install the toolchain locally (reads devDependencies
from package.json
):
npm install
Building
You can now build the PureScript source code with:
# An alias for `spago build`
npm run build
Launching the App
You can launch your app in the browser with:
# An alias for `parcel dev/index.html --out-dir dev-dist --open`
npm run serve
Development Cycle
If you're using an editor that supports purs ide
or are running pscid
, you simply need to keep the previous npm run serve
command running in a terminal. Any save to a file will trigger an incremental recompilation, rebundle, and web page refresh, so you can immediately see your changes.
If your workflow does not support automatic recompilation, then you will need to manually re-run npm run build
. Even with automatic recompilation, a manual rebuild is occasionally required, such as when you add, remove, or modify module names, or notice any other unexpected behavior.
Production
When you are ready to create a minified bundle for deployment, run the following command:
npm run build-prod
Parcel output appears in the ./dist/
directory.
You can test the production output locally with a tool like http-server
. It seems that parcel
should also be able to accomplish this, but it unfortunately will only serve development builds locally.
npm install -g http-server
http-server dist -o
If everything looks good, you can then upload the contents of dist
to your preferred static hosting service.