安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
|
- The webs scaffolding tool for modern webapps | Yeoman
The Yeoman workflow comprises three types of tools for improving your productivity and satisfaction when building a web app: the scaffolding tool (yo), the build tool (npm scripts, Gulp, Grunt etc) and the package manager (like npm and Bower)
- Getting started with Yeoman
Yeoman is a generic scaffolding system allowing the creation of any kind of app It allows for rapidly getting started on new projects and streamlines the maintenance of existing projects
- Step 1: Set up your dev environment - Yeoman
Most of your interactions with Yeoman will be through the command line Run commands in the Terminal app if you’re on Mac, your shell in Linux, or cmder (preferably) PowerShell cmd exe if you are on Windows
- Frequently Asked Questions - Yeoman
How does Yeoman differ from build tools, such as Grunt or Gulp? Yeoman builds upon a number of open-source tools to offer an opinionated workflow that helps developers achieve common tasks more easily
- Generators - Yeoman
Your generator will automatically show up in the list if it meets the following criteria The list is populated every hour The name should be generator-your-unique-name This means it should begin with `generator-` and be followed by a unique (to npm) name Scoped name support is coming in the future A good description If you forked the generator, it should describe what is different and
- Learning resources - Yeoman
In case you're looking for some more persuasion that Yeoman can help automate your JavaScript development workflow, you might be interested in Jesse Warden's crash course on Bower and Grunt
- Support - Yeoman
Yeoman provides an optimized scaffolding and workflow experience for creating compelling web applications Developers use Yeoman together with build tools, for building their projects and Bower for package management
- Working With The File System - Yeoman
As asynchronous APIs are harder to use, Yeoman provide a synchronous file-system API where every file gets written to an in-memory file system and are only written to disk once when Yeoman is done running
|
|
|