semantic-release
tsdx
Our great sponsors
semantic-release | tsdx | |
---|---|---|
75 | 45 | |
19,610 | 11,135 | |
1.5% | 0.3% | |
9.4 | 0.0 | |
5 days ago | 10 months ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
semantic-release
- alacritty-themes not working any more!!!
- Announcing @ngneat/avvvatars
- Auto versioning?
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How to set up Commitzen with Husky
Conventional commits specification contains a set of rules for creating an explicit commit history, which makes it easier to write automated tools on top of, for example, semantic release. You can manually follow this convention in your project or use a tool to assist you, such as Commitizen.
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Automated release with Semantic Release and commitizen
When working with JavaScript projects, managing version numbers and commit messages is important for the maintainability of the project. Since 2020 I have been the main developer of Atomic Calendar Revive a highly customisable Home Assistant calendar card, I found maintaining versions and releases to be cumbersome until recently. In this article, I will introduce the commitizen and semantic-release packages for creation or appropriate commit messages and semantic versioning. I will also provide examples of how I am currently using these packages to streamline my release workflow and project maintenance.
- ๐ฆ Effortless Data Quality w/duckdb on GitHub โพ๏ธ
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How I Sliced Deployment Times to a Fraction and Achieved Lightning-Fast Deployments with GitHub Actions
To further streamline deployments, I introduced semantic-release. This tool automates commit tagging and tracks changes since the previous version. As a result, deployments now occur only when new tags are present, saving us valuable minutes.
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What are some examples of good release notes from open source projects that you have come across?
If your projects ar made in javascript and related tools, I'd suggest you to check: semantic-release
- ๐ Mobile App deployment automation ๐ฑ
- GitOps/Argo CD Deployment Flow Question
tsdx
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ReactJS Good Practices
tsdx - Zero-config CLI for TypeScript package development
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Using Next.js components in a custom npm library
Thanks for the insight fellas. Aside question, I was thinking of bootstrapping the project with tsdx, but their last release was well over 2 years ago. Wondering if there are any alternative options for creating libraries?
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Rollup Library Starter
NOTE: If your project uses TypeScript, I would suggest using tsdx instead.
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Creating Modern npm Packages
Sadly, it's a bit dead. We switched to dts-cli fork, but tsup looks good too
Used https://tsdx.io/ recently to do this, saved a lot of time and effort.
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TypeScript is terrible for library developers
I don't depend on the actual typescript docs much but thankfully in @types and in tons of repos there are examples of well written typescript code.
The amount of JS and TS out there is also a bit of a foot gun though so stick with heavily used/starred libs if you aren't sure.
One tool that helps a lot with developing libraries in typescript is TSDX[0] or its successor dts-cli[1] and there is a bunch of good stuff in awesesome-typescript[2].
Maybe library devving is harder?(more work?) with tyepscript but it is worth it for the end developer, especially if that end developer is you. If you aren't using your own libs then you're probably getting paid by someone else to make them or... idk.
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How to create your own React Components library
We will use a TSDX library - this tool is something similar to create-react-app, but for creating components library. It allows as to initialize a project immediately with already set up bundler, Rollup with Typescript supporting, testing with Jest, code formatter, Prettier and Storybook.
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Is there a point in writing in TypeScript personal projects that I will maintain myself?
May be you need to try https://tsdx.io/
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The Node ecosystem (still) has tooling problems
So what is the ideal way to build TypeScript libraries? I've heard that tsdx https://tsdx.io/ is quite good
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How to include dependent types in library build?
I'd just add the types as a dependency but if you want to bundle them then afaik https://github.com/jaredpalmer/tsdx can do it (though I have never tried).
What are some alternatives?
GitVersion - From git log to SemVer in no time
standard-version - :trophy: Automate versioning and CHANGELOG generation, with semver.org and conventionalcommits.org
Release It! ๐ - ๐ Automate versioning and package publishing
release-drafter - Drafts your next release notes as pull requests are merged into master.
Microbundle - ๐ฆ Zero-configuration bundler for tiny modules.
turborepo - Incremental bundler and build system optimized for JavaScriptย and TypeScript, written in Rust โ including Turborepo and Turbopack. [Moved to: https://github.com/vercel/turbo]
parcel - The zero configuration build tool for the web. ๐ฆ๐
tsup - The simplest and fastest way to bundle your TypeScript libraries.
create-react-app - Set up a modern web app by running one command.
commitlint - ๐ Lint commit messages
nx - Smart Monorepos ยท Fast CI
esbuild - An extremely fast bundler for the web