Bootstrap libraries that follow common fp-ts coding, documentation and testing patterns.
fp-ts brings typed functional programming to TypeScript. The advantage over functional languages that compile to JavaScript is that it's much closer to an already existing and typed ecosystem.
This provides a nice out of the box compatibility. However, fp-ts is most powerful and composable if special purpose libraries follow some conventions. The fp-ts ecosystem is still relatively small. create-fp-ts-lib
helps you to bootstrap libraries that follow common fp-ts coding, documentation and testing patterns.
This is the main goal of this project. However it may be useful to create any other TypeScript library as well. Currently nothing inherently fp-ts specific is generated, except from a peer dependency. But this may change in the future.
yarn global add create-fp-ts-lib
create-fp-ts-lib
If you want don't want to go through the questions, you can run create-fp-ts-lib -q -n my-lib
to just specify a name and use the defaults for any other options.
You can also use this shortcut to always invoke an up to date version:
yarn create fp-ts-lib
npm install -g create-fp-ts-lib
create-fp-ts-lib
If you want don't want to go through the questions, you can run create-fp-ts-lib -q -n my-lib
to just specify a name and use the defaults for any other options.
You can also use this shortcut to always invoke an up to date version:
npm init fp-ts-lib
- Test framework: ts-jest
- Property based testing using fast-check
- API generation by docs-ts
- JSDoc formatting using prettier-plugin-jsdoc
- README post-processing with markdown-magic (e.g. table of content generation)
- Code spell checking by cspell
tsconfig.json
settings that emits distributable.d.ts
and.js
files
- CI via GitHub Actions
- Generate docs and deploy to GitHub pages using github-pages-deploy-action
- Easy publishing to NPM by drafting a release on GitHub
- All task scripts postfixed with
:watch
run as vscode tasks - Note: You need to
Ctrl+shift+P
andTasks: Manage Automatic Tasks in Folder
and choose "Allow Automatic Tasks in folder"
Command | Action |
---|---|
yarn build |
Build distribution files |
yarn test |
Run test suite |
yarn docs |
Generate Documentation |
yarn lint |
Run linter |
yarn md |
Enhance README with auto generations |
yarn spell |
Run the code spell checker |
You can use npm
as well. Check the generated package.json
for available watch tasks.
- Push to your remote repo at GitHub (triggers CI)
- In the GitHub UI of your repo, go to "Settings" > "GitHub Pages"
- Select
gh-pages
branch as source, keep the "root" directory and "Save"
-
Only once:
- In the GitHub UI add
NPM_TOKEN
from you NPM account as a secret ("Settings" / "Secrets")
- In the GitHub UI add
-
On every release:
- Increase the version in the
package.json
e.g. to "1.0.1" - Commit as
v1.0.1
- In the GitHub UI, go to the "releases" section of your repo.
- Select "Create a new release"
- Use
v1.0.1
as "Tag version" and "Release title" - Click "Publish release"
- Check the "Actions" tab to see if CI runs properly
- Increase the version in the
Currently the tool is optimized for creating new projects from scratch. However, we provide an --inPlace
option, which is not very smart yet. It will just generate files as usual and possibly override existing files. You'll need to sort out changes manually.
The CLI will make sure your git working directory is clean.
Run create-fp-ts-lib --help
to see all options.
Note: Unless you provide the --noQuest
flag, every CLI option will still appear in the user questionnaire. However equipped with the provided CLI options as default answers.
The following features are planned
- Check dependencies with depcheck
- Precommit hooks
- Run CI locally in isolated environment
- Readme badges (npm version, build status, dependencies)
- Watch task for linting using eslint-watch
- Maybe you have an idea... File an issue