@goto-bus-stop/create
v2.2.0
Published
Create a new node module with all the right stuff.
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module-init
Create a new node module with all the right stuff.
Overview
module-init
is a command-line tool for generating a new node module.
The following list of files are created based on user input:
- README.md
- Automatically generates title, description, and some tasteful badges (version, build status, code style).
- Auto-populates install, usage, contributing, and license sections with relevant info.
- LICENSE.md
- Options:
Apache-2.0
,BSD-3-Clause
,CC0-1.0
,ISC
,MIT
,UNLICENSED
.
- Options:
- CHANGELOG.md
- Uses Keep a Changelog style.
- CONTRIBUTING.md
- Optionally generates contributing guidelines based on CONTRIBUTING.md boilerplate.
- package.json
- .travis.yml
- Covers Node.js
4
and6
.
- Covers Node.js
- .gitignore
- Ignores
node_modules
directory.
- Ignores
- index.js
- A blank module entry point file.
- test/index.js
- A boilerplate test file using
tape
.
- A boilerplate test file using
Optionally runs git init
and npm install
in the new module directory.
Install
npm install @goto-bus-stop/create -g
Usage
CLI
$ npm init @goto-bus-stop --help
Usage: @goto-bus-stop/create [options]
--dir, -d specify module directory (default: cwd)
--version, -v show version information
--force, -f skip prompt and init with defaults
--help, -h show help
Example
~ $ npm init @goto-bus-stop -d new-project
? name: new-project
? version: 1.0.0
? description:
? keywords:
? license: ISC
? private: No
? CONTRIBUTING.md: Yes
? git init: Yes
? npm install: Yes
Initialized empty Git repository in /Users/yourname/new-project/.git/
✓ .gitignore created
✓ .travis.yml created
✓ CHANGELOG.md created
✓ CONTRIBUTING.md created
✓ LICENSE created
✓ README.md created
✓ package.json created
✓ index.js created
✓ test/index.js created
[email protected] node_modules/tape
...
[email protected] node_modules/tap-spec
...
[email protected] node_modules/standard
...
✓ new-project initialized
Node API
module-init
can also be required as a regular node module.
Configuration properties from other sources (.gitconfig
, current working directory) will not be automatically used as defaults in this mode. All required properties need to be passed in explicitly.
var moduleInit = require('module-init')
var options = {
pkgName: 'cool-package', // required
pkgVersion: '1.0.0', // required
usrName: 'Your Name', // required
usrEmail: '[email protected]', // required
usrGithub: 'githubUsername' // required
pkgDescription: 'description', // optional
pkgKeywords: 'one, two, three', // optional
pkgContributing: true, // optional, default: true
pkgLicense: 'ISC', // optional, default: ISC
private: true, // optional, default: false (omitted if false)
dir: 'project-directory' // optional: default: cwd
}
moduleInit(options)
.on('create', function (filename) {
console.log(`${filename} created`)
// file created
})
.on('warn', function (message) {
console.log(`warning: ${message}`)
// something weird but non-critical happened
})
.on('err', function (err) {
console.error(err)
process.exit(1)
// something went horribly wrong! stop everything!
})
.on('done', function (result) {
console.log(result) // object containing module metadata
// done!
})
.run() // run the thing
moduleInit
returns an event emitter that emits create
, warn
, err
, and done
.
moduleInit.on(string, function)
works as demonstrated in the example above.
moduleInit.run()
runs the initialization process. It also calls moduleInit.validate()
internally before proceeding and will emit an err
event if required options are missing. Event listeners need to be set before moduleInit.run()
is called.
moduleInit.validate()
returns an array of missing required options. It returns an empty array if everything's fine. This method is really just for internal use, but is exposed for testing and convenience.
Take a look at bin/cli.js to see how the API is being used by the CLI.
Contributing
Contributions welcome! Please read the contributing guidelines before getting started.
Collaborators
module-init
is only possible due to the excellent work of the following collaborators: