- Using
ReasonReactandReasonReactRouter. - Using bs-fetch for data fetching.
- Using bs-json to serialization nested API response.
npm install
npm run server
# in a new tab
npm startOpen a new web page to http://localhost:8000/. Change any .re file in src to see the page auto-reload. You don't need any bundler when you're developing!
How come we don't need any bundler during development? We highly encourage you to open up index.html to check for yourself!
We've included a convenience UNUSED_webpack.config.js, in case you want to ship your project to production. You can rename and/or remove that in favor of other bundlers, e.g. Rollup.
We've also provided a barebone indexProduction.html, to serve your bundle.
npm install webpack webpack-cli
# rename file
mv UNUSED_webpack.config.js webpack.config.js
# call webpack to bundle for production
./node_modules/.bin/webpack
open indexProduction.htmlTo serve the files, this template uses a minimal dependency called moduleserve. A URL such as localhost:8000/scores/john resolves to the file scores/john.html. If you'd like to override this and handle URL resolution yourself, change the server command in package.json from moduleserve ./ --port 8000 to moduleserve ./ --port 8000 --spa (for "single page application"). This will make moduleserve serve the default index.html for any URL. Since index.html loads Index.bs.js, you can grab hold of the URL in the corresponding Index.re and do whatever you want.
By the way, ReasonReact comes with a small router you might be interested in.