TL;DR: use Vite!
nwb was created at a time when JavaScript tooling was in flux, when the capabilities of ES6 were less widely-supported by browsers than they are today, and when versions of Webpack, Babel and other common build tools were out of date almost as soon as you added them to your package.json, and there wasn't even a create-react-app yet!
People who were adopting these tools ended up having to independently manage the same sets of dependencies and configure them to work together to create a great local development experience, a solid testing setup and optimised production builds.
The goal of nwb was to take the weight of managing these off the shoulders of developers, and instead provide a configuration file exposing a smaller surface area for the configuration needed to tweak the things which were specific to your project.
At this point in time, years later than we should have formally announced nwb's deprecation, Vite is one of the best implementations of that goal there is.
It's massively popular, widely-used, and it's likely that every plugin you need for your use case has already likely written, and if not, there's an API for that, which is so good that high-quality frameworks now build on top of Vite, such as Astro for static site generation (and on-demand server rendering) and React Router for client and/or server rendered React apps.
Web Application frameworks like Hono also provide official plugins to integrate with Vite's development server if you just need to create a server which serves up a client app and provide authentication and API endpoints, while retaining Vite's fantastic developer experience.
Vite also comes with a fantastic testing framework in Vitest which integrates directly with Vite, rather than the hodge-podge of different configs we used to have to deal with to get the likes of Karma sucessfully using the same build tooling as the rest of our development process (IYKYK).
In summary:
-
Starting a new React/Preact etc. project today? Possibly even your first project?
Use Vite. There will be a plugin and a project template for whatever you want to use.
-
Have an old project which used something like nwb or create-react-app?
Migrate to Vite. It's not going to be painless, but it's going to be better. I've done it. You can do it.
-
Starting a new project which needs client rendering? Server rendering?
Use Vite. There's a plugin or maybe even a framework built on Vite for that. Don't take on more complexity than you need. Don't fight with a framework intended for server rendering if that's not what you need.
Thanks for using nwb!
-- Jonny
nwb is a toolkit for:
A zero-config development setup is provided, but nwb also supports configuration and plugin modules which add extra functionality (e.g. Sass support), should you need them
Installing globally provides an nwb
command for quick development and working with projects.
npm install -g nwb
Note: if you're using npm 5 and getting an
EACCES: permission denied
error from nwb's PhantomJS dependency while installing globally, try passing an--unsafe-perm
flag:
npm install -g --unsafe-perm nwb
To use nwb's tooling in a project, install it as a devDependency
and use nwb
commands in package.json
"scripts"
:
npm install --save-dev nwb
{
"scripts": {
"start": "nwb serve-react-app",
"build": "nwb build-react-app"
}
}
For quick development with React, Inferno, Preact or vanilla JavaScript, use the nwb react
, nwb inferno
, nwb preact
or nwb web
commands.
import React, {Component} from 'react'
export default class App extends Component {
render() {
return <h1>Hello world!</h1>
}
}
$ nwb react run app.js
✔ Installing react and react-dom
Starting Webpack compilation...
Compiled successfully in 5033 ms.
The app is running at http://localhost:3000/
$ nwb react build app.js
✔ Building React app
File size after gzip:
dist\app.cff417a3.js 46.72 KB
See Quick Development with nwb for a more detailed guide.
Use nwb new react-app
to create a React app skeleton, preconfigured with npm scripts which use nwb
for development:
nwb new react-app my-app
cd my-app/
npm start
Open localhost:3000, start editing the code and changes will be hot-reloaded into the running app.
npm test
will run the app's tests and npm run build
will create a production build.
See Developing React Apps with nwb for a more detailed guide.
Use nwb new preact-app
to create a Preact app skeleton:
nwb new preact-app my-app
Use nwb new inferno-app
to create an Inferno app skeleton:
nwb new inferno-app my-app
Use nwb new web-app
to create a vanilla JavaScript app skeleton:
nwb new web-app my-app
nwb new react-component my-component
cd my-component/
npm start
will run a demo app you can use to develop your component or library against.
npm test
will run the project's tests and npm run build
will create ES5, ES modules and UMD builds for publishing to npm.
See Developing React Components and Libraries with nwb for a more detailed guide.
nwb new web-module my-module
cd my-module/
npm test
will run the project's tests and npm run build
will create ES5, ES modules and UMD builds for publishing to npm.
- Quick Development with nwb
- Developing React Apps with nwb
- Developing React Components and Libraries with nwb
- Features
- Commands
- Configuration
- Testing
- Plugins
- Middleware
- Examples
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Versioning
Get started quickly. Start developing from a single .js
file or generate a project skeleton.
Covers the whole development cycle. Development tools, testing and production builds for projects work out of the box, no configuration required.
Flexible. While everything works out of the box, you can also use an optional configuration file to tweak things to your liking.
Manages key development dependencies and configuration for you. Check out an example of the effect using nwb had on the amount of devDependencies
and configuration to be managed in a real project it was dropped into.
Cover image created by GeorgioWan
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