##Sample AngularJs App
Based on the boilerplate: https://github.com/unicodeveloper/angularjs-starter
fork
this repoclone
your forknpm install -g gulp karma karma-cli webpack
install global cli dependenciesnpm install
to install dependencies
NG6 uses Gulp to build and launch the development environment. After you have installed all dependencies, you may run the app. Running gulp
will bundle the app with webpack
, launch a development server, and watch all files. The port will be displayed in the terminal.
Here's a list of available tasks:
webpack
- runs Webpack, which will transpile, concatenate, and compress (collectively, "bundle") all assets and modules into
dist/bundle.js
. It also preparesindex.html
to be used as application entry point, links assets and created dist version of our application.
- runs Webpack, which will transpile, concatenate, and compress (collectively, "bundle") all assets and modules into
serve
- starts a dev server via
webpack-dev-server
, serving the client folder.
- starts a dev server via
watch
- alias of
serve
- alias of
default
(which is the default task that runs when typinggulp
without providing an argument)- runs
serve
.
- runs
component
- scaffolds a new Angular component. Read below for usage details.
To run the tests, run npm test
or karma start
.
Karma
combined with Webpack runs all files matching *.spec.js
inside the app
folder. This allows us to keep test files local to the component--which keeps us in good faith with continuing to build our app modularly. The file spec.bundle.js
is the bundle file for all our spec files that Karma will run.
Be sure to define your *.spec.js
files within their corresponding component directory. You must name the spec file like so, [name].spec.js
. If you don't want to use the .spec.js
suffix, you must change the regex
in spec.bundle.js
to look for whatever file(s) you want.
Mocha
is the testing suite and Chai
is the assertion library. If you would like to change this, see karma.conf.js
.