I agree. I Have not made up my mind yet, thats why I am trying to understand what people do in similar project setup. Then i can also follow the same path.
I'm a fan of Open Source and have a growing interest in serverless and edge computing. I'm not a big fan of spiders, but they're doing good work eating bugs. I also stream on Twitch.
Hey there, I'm Nick and this is my site's source code. This site started off as a clone of the Netlify CMS Gatsby Starter (check it out!). Since then, I've tweaked it a lot and converted the codebase to TypeScript.
Feel free to peruse the code and/or fork it. 😉
Thanks to all the wonderful projects that made it possible to build this blog.
clone the repository by running git clone git@github.com:nickytonline/www.iamdeveloper.com.git or git clone https://github.com/nickytonline/www.iamdeveloper.com.git
run npm install
run npm run develop to get up and running with the Gatsby development server.
Since the project uses Babel and not TypeScript as the compiler, a separate process is required to run type checking. Open another terminal and run npm run type-check:watch
If you're curious about why the Netlify CMS admin is…
I agree. I Have not made up my mind yet, thats why I am trying to understand what people do in similar project setup. Then i can also follow the same path.
Update to this. I use eslint with TypeScript now. If you want to see my setup, check out
nickytonline / iamdeveloper.com
Source code for my web site iamdeveloper.com
iamdeveloper.com
Hey there, I'm Nick and this is my site's source code. This site started off as a clone of the Netlify CMS Gatsby Starter (check it out!). Since then, I've tweaked it a lot and converted the codebase to TypeScript.
Feel free to peruse the code and/or fork it.😉
Thanks to all the wonderful projects that made it possible to build this blog.
To get up and running:
git clone git@github.com:nickytonline/www.iamdeveloper.com.git
orgit clone https://github.com/nickytonline/www.iamdeveloper.com.git
npm install
npm run develop
to get up and running with the Gatsby development server.npm run type-check:watch
Also, here's a great post from @robertcoopercode about TypeScript and ESLINT.
Using ESLint and Prettier in a TypeScript Project
Robert Cooper
Woot woot thanks for the shoutout.
@gyandeeps and I have been discussing whether using a linter is at all useful when combined with TypeScript. He doesn't seem convinced, haha.