Book Image

React 16 Tooling

By : Adam Boduch, Christopher Pitt
Book Image

React 16 Tooling

By: Adam Boduch, Christopher Pitt

Overview of this book

React 16 Tooling covers the most important tools, utilities, and libraries that every React developer needs to know — in detail. As React has grown, the amazing toolset around it has also grown, adding features and enhancing the development workflow. Each of these essential tools is presented in a practical manner and in a logical order mirroring the development workflow. These tools will make your development life simpler and happier, enabling you to create better and more performant apps. Adam starts with a hand-picked selection of the best tools for the React 16 ecosystem. For starters, there’s the create-react-app utility that’s officially supported by the React team. Not only does this tool bootstrap your React project for you, it also provides a consistent and stable framework to build upon. The premise is that when you don’t have to think about meta development work, more focus goes into the product itself. Other React tools follow this same approach to automating and improving your development life. Jest makes unit testing quicker. Flow makes catching errors easier. Docker containers make deployment in a stack simpler. Storybook makes developing components straightforward. ESLint makes writing standardized code faster. The React DevTools plugin makes debugging a cinch. React 16 Tooling clears away the barriers so you can focus on developing the good parts. In this book, we’ll look at each of these powerful tools in detail, showing you how to build the perfect React ecosystem to develop your apps within.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
2
Efficiently Bootstrapping React Applications with Create React App
Index

Summary


In this chapter, you built a simple messaging app called Barely SMS. Then, you learned how to deploy this app as a Docker container. Then, you learned how to package services together, including the UI service, so that you have a higher level of abstraction to work with when deploying applications with many moving parts. Lastly, you learned how to build production-ready static assets and serve them with an industrial strength HTTP server—NGINX.

I hope this has been an enlightening read. It was both a challenge and a joy to write. Tooling in web development shouldn't be as difficult as it has been over the past decade. Projects like React and browser vendors like Chrome are starting to change this trend. I believe that any technology is only as good as its tooling. Now that you have a firm handle on tooling available in the React ecosystem, put it to good use and let it do the hard work for you.