Based on the architecture suggestions from Facebook, this boilerplate will help you deal with it. It has included the flux-react extension to React JS, flux-react.
Read more about FLUX over at Facebook Flux and I wrote a post about it too: My experiences building a FLUX application and React JS and FLUX
- Run
npm install
- Run
gulp
- Start a webservice in the
build
folder, f.ex.python -m SimpleHTTPServer
- Go to
localhost:8000
to display the app - Go to
localhost:8000/testrunner.html
to see your tests - Any changes to
app
orstyles
folder will automatically rebuild tobuild
folder - Both tests and application changes will refresh automatically in the browser
- Run
gulp test
to run all tests with phantomJS and produce XML reports
- Run
gulp deploy
- build/: Where your automatically builds to. This is where you launch your app in development
- dist/: Where the deployed code exists, ready for production
- styles/: Where you put your css files
- specs/: Where you put your test files
- gulpfile: Gulp configuration