Create React App From Template
Use your own starting point when setting up a new app, e.g. CSS, JS, manifests an such.
$ npm install -g create-react-app
$ npm install -g craftool
$ craft MyApp https://github.com/stoyan/fail/archive/master.zip
$ cd MyApp
$ npm install . # sets up create-react-app
This creates an app called MyApp using a zip template from github
$ npm start . # start developing
$ npm run build # deploy
To create your own template you use create-react-app first. Then you tweak the app until you're happy with it and you want to use it as a template for other apps.
Now you zip everything in the root of your app except for any build/ or node_modules/.
Normally your zip contains:
package.json(required)README.md(doesn't matter, it will be rewritten when a new app is generated from the template, see below)- other root-y things like
manifest.json(for PWA),.gitignore,LICENSE,.travis.ymland so on public/folder withindex.html,favicon.ico...src/folder withApp.js,App.css,images/...
If you put these things on Github, let Github do the zipping.
An example template's code is located at https://github.com/stoyan/fail/
And the ZIP file's URL is available from...
CRAFT has a spacial treatment for some files:
package.json- CRAFT overwrites the app name with the name provided by the user and sets the version to1.0.0README.md- it's completely rewritten with a barebone contents: the app name and the string "Hello". So feel free to add any useful text that shows up in github or npm, it will be gone in the newly-generated user apppostcraft.txt- after the app is generated successfully the user is instructed to go to the new app's dir and runnpm install .. If you have any other words of wisdom, put them inpostcraft.txtso they can be shown to the user. The file itself is deleted from the newly generated app
CRAFT has a special treatment for all .CSS, .JS, .HTML and .JSON files. In all of these files all strings matching the template's name (read from package.json) are replaced with the name of the newly generated app (set by the user). So if the user does...
$ craft MyApp https://github.com/stoyan/fail/archive/master.zip
... then the template's index.html (just one example) turns from...
<title>fail</title>... to...
<title>MyApp</title>... provided the template's package.json has...
{
"name": "fail",
"...": "..."
}- Clone the repo
npm install .node index.js MyApp http://example.org/zip.zip
... is on Medium