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🚀 Quick start

📦 Package Manager

Intall NPM

Node Package Manager comes bundled with Node.js, so to install npm you first need to install Node.js.

GitHub CLI

GitHub CLI is an easy to use command line interface for GitHub.

Installation

Windows

winget install GitHub.cli

MacOS

brew install gh

⚙️ Configuration

🔒 Authorisation

Run gh auth login to authenticate with your GitHub account. Alternatively, gh will respect the GITHUB_TOKEN environment variable.

To set your preferred editor, use gh config set editor <editor>. Read more about gh config and environment variables.

Declare your aliases for often-used commands with gh alias set.

🌍 Clone the Project

Using Github CLI (recommended)

In your terminal, open the directory where you want to clone the project to, and enter the command:

gh repo clone IMY772-2022/via-web

GUI Client

Alternatively, a GUI client such as GitHub Desktop can be used to clone the project. You can download it from GitHub Desktop.

The repo can also be cloned from within VSCode.

📦 Installing Dependencies

Node Modules

To install all the dependencies required by the project, run the command:

npm

npm install

Commitizen CLI

First, install the Commitizen CLI tools:

npm install commitizen -g

Gatsby CLI

In order to develop a Gatsby project, you need to install the Gatsby CLI:

npm install -g gatsby-cli

🚦 Run the Project

(in the project directory) run the following command:

npm

npm run develop

This will serve the project on you local network, enabling it to be acccessed from any other device on the same network.

Commmitting Changes

Code must NEVER be commited directly to the main branch.

The Commitizen CLI can be used to help with formatting of commit messages.

To use Commitizen, run the following command:

cz

You can the follow the on screen instructions to commit your code.

  • use feature for new features
  • use fix for bugfixes
  • use refactor for structure/logic changes
  • use docs for documentation changes
  • use chore for non-code changes

Please note: commit messages should be in imperative tense, for e.g.,

feature: add initial home screen implementation
fix: cart button alignment
refactor: cart button display logic

If the changes are more complex, you can provide additional information on how the code changed.

Any breaking changes can be indicated at the relevant prompt.

Pull Requests

Code changes can be merged into the develop branch.

Pull request templates are set up on GitHub. In general, PRs can only be merged when:

  • Someone other than the author has reviewed and approved the changes
  • All the build checks from Amplify has completed successfully
  • The branch is synched with the latest changes from the develop branch (optional)

🌴 Branching Rules

Whenever a new feature or bugfix is added, a new branch is added, with develop as the base branch. For e.g.,

main
 develop
   |
   |-- feature/add-initial-home-screen
   |-- fix/cart-button-alignment
  • use feature for new features
  • use fix for bugfixes
  • use refactor for structure/logic changes
  • use docs for documentation changes
  • use chore for non-code changes

📕 Style Guide

import React from "react"
import "./ExampleComponet"

import { GetSubscriptions } from "../../utils.ts"
import { DATE_FORMAT } from "../types.ts"
import { useSubscription } from "./hooks.ts"

const DATE_FORMAT = "YYYY-MM-DD"

const ExampleComponent: React.FC = () => {
  return (
    <>
      <h1>Example Component</h1>
    </>
  )
}

export default ExampleComponent

🗂️ Folder Structure

Grouped per component, with global styles, utils, and types in the src folder.

node_modules/
src/
    components/
        Card
            card.tsx
            card.spec.ts
        Home/
            index.tsx
            index.scss
        hooks
          useCamera.ts
        utils
          constants.ts
    style.scss
    index.tsx
package.json