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📦 React • Typescript • Package Starter

A slightly opinionated starter kit for developing React and/or TypeScript packages. It comes with a several pre-configured tools, so you could focus on coding instead of configuring a project for the nth time. From building to releasing a package, this starter kit has you covered.

👋 Hello there! Follow me @linesofcode or visit linesofcode.dev for more cool projects like this one.

🏃 Getting started

npx degit TimMikeladze/tsup-react-package-starter my-react-package

cd my-react-package && git init

yarn && yarn dev

❗Important note: This project uses yarn for managing dependencies. If you want to use another package manager, remove the yarn.lock and control-f for usages of yarn in the project and replace them with your package manager of choice.

What's included?

  • ⚡️tsup - The simplest and fastest way to bundle your TypeScript libraries. Used to bundle package as ESM and CJS modules. Supports TypeScript, Code Splitting, PostCSS, and more out of the box.
  • 🔗 Yalc - Better workflow then npm or yarn link for package authors.
  • 📖 Storybook - Build UI components and pages in isolation. It streamlines UI development, testing, and documentation.
  • ⚡️ Vitest - A testing framework for JavaScript. Preconfigured to work with TypeScript and JSX.
  • 🔼 Release-it - release-it is a command line tool to automatically generate a new GitHub Release and populates it with the changes (commits) made since the last release.
  • 🐙 Test & Publish via Github Actions - CI/CD workflows for your package. Run tests on every commit plus integrate with Github Releases to automate publishing package to NPM and Storybook to Github Pages.
  • 📄 Commitizen — When you commit with Commitizen, you'll be prompted to fill out any required commit fields at commit time.
  • 🚓 Commitlint — Checks that your commit messages meet the conventional commit format.
  • 🐶 Husky — Running scripts before committing.
  • 🚫 lint-staged — Run linters on git staged files
  • 🖌 Renovate - Universal dependency update tool that fits into your workflows. Configured to periodically check your dependencies for updates and send automated pull requests.
  • ☑️ ESLint - A linter for JavaScript. Includes a simple configuration for React projects based on the recommended ESLint and AirBnB configs.
  • 🎨 Prettier - An opinionated code formatter.

Usage

💻 Developing

Watch and rebuild code with tsup and runs Storybook to preview your UI during development.

yarn dev

Run all tests and watch for changes

yarn test

🏗️ Building

Build package with tsup for production.

yarn build

🖇️ Linking

Often times you want to link this package to another project when developing locally, circumventing the need to publish to NPM to consume it.

For this we use yalc which is a tool for local package development and simulating the publishing and installation of packages.

In a project where you want to consume your package simply run:

npx yalc link my-react-package

Learn more about yalc here.

📩 Committing

When you are ready to commit simply run the following command to get a well formatted commit message. All staged files will automatically be linted and fixed as well.

yarn commit

🔖 Releasing, tagging & publishing to NPM

Create a semantic version tag and publish to Github Releases. When a new release is detected a Github Action will automatically build the package and publish it to NPM. Additionally, a Storybook will be published to Github pages.

Learn more about how to use the release-it command here.

yarn release

When you are ready to publish to NPM simply run the following command:

yarn publish

🤖 Auto publish after Github Release

❗Important note: in order to automatically publish a Storybook on Github Pages you need to open your repository settings, navigate to "Actions" and enable "Read & write permissions" for Workflows.

❗Important note: in order to publish package to NPM you must add your token as a Github Action secret. Learn more on how to configure your repository and publish packages through Github Actions here.

🎨 CSS & PostCSS

Import CSS files works out of the box. Simply import your CSS files in your components and they will be bundled with your package.

tsup supports PostCSS out of the box. Simply run yarn add postcss -D add a postcss.config.js file to the root of your project, then add any plugins you need. Learn more how to configure PostCSS here.

Additionally consider using the tsup configuration option injectStyle to inject the CSS directly into your Javascript bundle instead of outputting a separate CSS file.

🚀 Built something using this starter-kit?

That's awesome! Feel free to add it to the list.

  • 🔐 next-auth-mui - Sign-in dialog for NextAuth built with MUI and React. Detects configured OAuth and Email providers and renders buttons or input fields for each respectively. Fully themeable, extensible and customizable to support custom credential flows.
  • 🗃️ next-upload - Turn-key solution for signed & secure file-uploads to an S3 compliant storage service such as R2, AWS, or Minio. Built for Next.js.
  • 📮 next-invite - A drop-in invite system for your Next.js app. Generate and share invite links for users to join your app.
  • 🐌 space-slug - Generate unique slugs and usernames using an intuitive api with zero dependencies.
  • 🗂️ use-file-system - A set of React hooks to interact with the File System API. Watch a directory for changes and return a map of filepaths & contents when a file is added, modified or removed.