After forking the repo from GitHub and installing pnpm:
git clone https://github.com/<your-name-here>/SquiggleConf
cd SquiggleConf
pnpm install
This repository includes a list of suggested VS Code extensions. It's a good idea to use VS Code and accept its suggestion to install them, as they'll help with development.
All Astro commands are run from the root of the project, from a terminal:
Command | Action |
---|---|
pnpm run dev |
Starts local dev server at localhost:3000 |
pnpm run build |
Build your production site to ./dist/ |
pnpm run preview |
Preview your build locally, before deploying |
pnpm run astro ... |
Run CLI commands like astro add , astro check |
pnpm run astro --help |
Get help using the Astro CLI |
Prettier is used to format code. It should be applied automatically when you save files in VS Code or make a Git commit.
To manually reformat all files, you can run:
pnpm format --write
This package includes several forms of linting to enforce consistent code quality and styling. Each should be shown in VS Code, and can be run manually on the command-line:
pnpm lint
(ESLint with typescript-eslint): Lints JavaScript and TypeScript source filespnpm lint:knip
(knip): Detects unused files, dependencies, and code exportspnpm lint:md
(Markdownlint: Checks Markdown source filespnpm lint:packages
(pnpm dedupe --check): Checks for unnecessarily duplicated packages in thepnpm-lock.yml
filepnpm lint:spelling
(cspell): Spell checks across all source files
Read the individual documentation for each linter to understand how it can be configured and used best.
For example, ESLint can be run with --fix
to auto-fix some lint rule complaints:
pnpm run lint --fix
Note that you'll likely need to run pnpm build
before pnpm lint
so that lint rules which check the file system can pick up on any built files.
You should be able to see suggestions from TypeScript in your editor for all open files.
However, it can be useful to run the TypeScript command-line (tsc
) to type check all files in src/
:
pnpm tsc
Add --watch
to keep the type checker running in a watch mode that updates the display as you save files:
pnpm tsc --watch