A simple CLI for scaffolding various projects. Forked from vue-cli and using an alternative default templates repo.
Prerequisites: Node.js (>=4.x, 6.x preferred), npm version 3+ and Git.
NPM
$ npm install -g stage-cli
Yarn
$ yarn global add stage-cli
$ stage init <template-name> <project-name>
Example:
$ stage init html-simple my-project
The above command pulls the template from stage-templates/html-simple, prompts for some information, and generates the project at ./my-project/.
The purpose of official Vue project templates are to provide opinionated, battery-included development tooling setups so that users can get started with actual app code as fast as possible. However, these templates are un-opinionated in terms of how you structure your app code and what libraries you use in addition to Vue.js.
The purpose of official templates are to provide opinionated, batteries-included development tooling so users can get started with actual code as fast as possible. However, these templates are un-opinionated in terms of how you structure your app code and what libraries you use in addition to the project scaffolding.
The official templates are derived from project types that I personally have used with various frequency using build tools that I prefer. I'm open to alternative contributions for templates. Ultimately, this is a really slick way to setup scaffolding without cloning a boilerplate repo, removing the .git directory and making a lot of additional changes to the boilerplate to personalize it for you're specific project.
All official project templates are repos in the stage-templates organization. When a new template is added to the organization, you will be able to run stage init <template-name> <project-name>
to use that template. You can also run stage list
to see all available official templates.
See the organization page for all available templates.
It's unlikely to make everyone happy with the official templates. You can simply fork an official template and then use it via vue-cli
with:
stage init username/repo my-project
Where username/repo
is the GitHub repo shorthand for your fork.
The shorthand repo notation is passed to download-git-repo so you can also use things like bitbucket:username/repo
for a Bitbucket repo and username/repo#branch
for tags or branches.
You can use the current vuejs-templates like this.
stage init vuejs-templates/webpack my-project
If you would like to download from a private repository use the --clone
flag and the cli will use git clone
so your SSH keys are used.
You are responsible for making sure your SSH keys are setup correctly.
Additionally, avoid using the shorthand notation for private repo's use something like this instead:
stage init bitbucket.org:username/repo --clone my-project
Instead of a GitHub repo, you can also use a template on your local file system:
stage init ~/fs/path/to-custom-template my-project
-
A template repo must have a
template
directory that holds the template files. -
A template repo may have a metadata file for the template which can be either a
meta.js
ormeta.json
file. It can contain the following fields:-
prompts
: used to collect user options data; -
filters
: used to conditional filter files to render. -
metalsmith
: used to add custom metalsmith plugins in the chain. -
completeMessage
: the message to be displayed to the user when the template has been generated. You can include custom instruction here. -
complete
: Instead of usingcompleteMessage
, you can use a function to run stuffs when the template has been generated.
-
The prompts
field in the metadata file should be an object hash containing prompts for the user. For each entry, the key is the variable name and the value is an Inquirer.js question object. Example:
{
"prompts": {
"name": {
"type": "string",
"required": true,
"message": "Project name"
}
}
}
After all prompts are finished, all files inside template
will be rendered using Handlebars, with the prompt results as the data.
A prompt can be made conditional by adding a when
field, which should be a JavaScript expression evaluated with data collected from previous prompts. For example:
{
"prompts": {
"lint": {
"type": "confirm",
"message": "Use a linter?"
},
"lintConfig": {
"when": "lint",
"type": "list",
"message": "Pick a lint config",
"choices": [
"standard",
"airbnb",
"none"
]
}
}
}
The prompt for lintConfig
will only be triggered when the user answered yes to the lint
prompt.
Two commonly used Handlebars helpers, if_eq
and unless_eq
are pre-registered:
You may want to register additional Handlebars helpers using the helpers
property in the metadata file. The object key is the helper name:
module.exports = {
helpers: {
lowercase: str => str.toLowerCase()
}
}
Upon registration, they can be used as follows:
The filters
field in the metadata file should be an object hash containing file filtering rules. For each entry, the key is a minimatch glob pattern and the value is a JavaScript expression evaluated in the context of prompt answers data. Example:
{
"filters": {
"test/**/*": "needTests"
}
}
Files under test
will only be generated if the user answered yes to the prompt for needTests
.
Note that the dot
option for minimatch is set to true
so glob patterns would also match dotfiles by default.
The skipInterpolation
field in the metadata file should be a minimatch glob pattern. The files matched should skip rendering. Example:
{
"skipInterpolation": "src/**/*.vue"
}
vue-cli
uses metalsmith to generate the project.
You may customize the metalsmith builder created by vue-cli to register custom plugins.
{
"metalsmith": function (metalsmith, opts, helpers) {
function customMetalsmithPlugin (files, metalsmith, done) {
// Implement something really custom here.
done(null, files)
}
metalsmith.use(customMetalsmithPlugin)
}
}
If you need to hook metalsmith before questions are asked, you may use an object with before
key.
{
"metalsmith": {
before: function (metalsmith, opts, helpers) {},
after: function (metalsmith, opts, helpers) {}
}
}
destDirName
- destination directory name
{
"completeMessage": "To get started:\n\n cd {{destDirName}}\n npm install\n npm run dev"
}
inPlace
- generating template into current directory
{
"completeMessage": "{{#inPlace}}To get started:\n\n npm install\n npm run dev.{{else}}To get started:\n\n cd {{destDirName}}\n npm install\n npm run dev.{{/inPlace}}"
}
Arguments:
-
data
: the same data you can access incompleteMessage
:{ complete (data) { if (!data.inPlace) { console.log(`cd ${data.destDirName}`) } } }
-
helpers
: some helpers you can use to log results.chalk
: thechalk
modulelogger
: the built-in vue-cli loggerfiles
: An array of generated files
{ complete (data, {logger, chalk}) { if (!data.inPlace) { logger.log(`cd ${chalk.yellow(data.destDirName)}`) } } }
stage-cli
uses the tool download-git-repo
to download the official templates used. The download-git-repo
tool allows you to indicate a specific branch for a given repository by providing the desired branch name after a pound sign (#
).
The format needed for a specific official template is:
stage init '<template-name>#<branch-name>' <project-name>
Example:
Installing the 1.0
branch of the simple stage template:
stage init 'simple#1.0' mynewproject
Note: The surrounding quotes are necessary on zsh shells because of the special meaning of the #
character.
Thanks to Evan You and Vue.js for creating another awesome tool in vue-cli which made this project possible.