angular-ngrx-scss starter kit
This starter kit features Angular 13, NgRx and SCSS.
Table of Contents
Overview
Tech Stack
Included Tooling
- Karma - Test runner
- Jasmine - Test framework
- TypeScript - Type checking
- Storybook - Component library
- ESLint - Code linting
- Prettier - Code formatting
Architectural Decisions
For this kit, we really wanted to showcase how powerful NgRx can be for managing the state of your application. NgRx helps us write actions to trigger state changes, reducers to handle those changes, selectors to grab pieces of state, and effects to communicate with external resources. By doing this, our Angular components can focus on presenting our data instead of needing to understand the logic of how that data is fetched and updated. You can also use the Redux devtools in your browser to help you visualize what your state looks like and how it updates.
One particular decision we made with the fetch example was to put the API call into its own service. We want this kit to be an example of current best practices. As such, it is recommended to keep your http logic separated into its own service that is then called in your effects files. This makes the API logic more straight forward to test and debug, and keeps the effect logic more concise.
Example Components
In this starters/angular-ngrx-scss/src/app
directory you will find the counter-example
, fetch-example
, home
, and state
directories.
The counter-example
, fetch-example
, and home
components are “page” components. The counter-example
folder also includes a starter-button
component, which is a re-usable button component tied to that page.
Angular components are split up into multiple files:
.html
files contain markup for the component..scss
files contain scoped styles that will only affect this component thanks to view encapsulation..ts
files contain TypeScript logic for the component. Not all components actually need logic, but this file is still required as it’s where the HTML template and SCSS styles are linked to the component..spec.ts
files are optional files that contain automated tests for the component. These tests are written to work with Karma and Jasmine..stories.ts
files are optional files containing stories for the component. These files help us visualize the different states the component can have in Storybook.
The state
directory is where all of our NgRx logic lives. You’ll find a folder for count
and greeting
, which relates to the counter-example
and fetch-example
components respectively. Each folder contains a file for:
- actions
- reducers
- selectors
- effects
- unit tests for reducers or effects
Installation
CLI (Recommended)
npm create @this-dot/starter -- --kit angular-ngrx-scss
or
yarn create @this-dot/starter --kit angular-ngrx-scss
- Follow the prompts to select the
angular-ngrx-scss
starter kit and name your new project. cd
into your project directory and runyarn
.- Run
yarn dev
to start the development server. - Open your browser to
http://localhost:3000
to see the included example code running.
Manual
git clone https://github.com/thisdot/starter.dev.git
- Copy and rename the
starters/angular-ngrx-scss
directory to the name of your new project. cd
into your project directory and runyarn
.- Run
yarn dev
to start the development server. - Open your browser to
http://localhost:3000
to see the included example code running.
Commands
yarn start
oryarn dev
- Starts the development server.yarn build
- Builds a compiled version of your app.yarn test
- Runs the unit tests.yarn storybook
- Starts the Storybook UI.yarn lint
- Runs ESLint on the project.yarn prettier
- Formats code for the entire project.
Demo Implementation
The demo application re-implements some of GitHub’s pages and functionality. It uses the OAuth credentials in GitHub to authenticate users with their GitHub accounts and uses Angular services and NgRx to fetch data from the GitHub API. Check out the link above to learn more or check out the demo!