Book Image

Learning Node.js for Mobile Application Development

Book Image

Learning Node.js for Mobile Application Development

Overview of this book

Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Learning Node.js for Mobile Application Development
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
14
Creating an E-Commerce Application Using the Ionic Framework
Index

The structure of an Ionic project


In the process of creating a project in the previous chapters, we created a directory entitled myfirstionicapp, which can be found in the root folder. We recommend that you open this project folder with an Integrated Development Environment (IDE) or a text editor. In our case, we are comfortable using Atom, which is an advanced open source text editor.

Note

You can download Atom from https://atom.io/.

Once you open your IDE and add the project folder to your workspace, you will see the following folder structure:

Let's take a closer look at each of the folders shown in the preceding screenshot in turn:

  • hooks: This folder is where our project will store automatically (or manually) generated hooks for the underlying Cordova system, which provides most of of our project's runtime.

  • platforms: This folder contains the necessary files and configurations that are required to deploy a project on a specific platform, such as Android or iOS.

  • plugins: This stores the various...