yogini is a prompt-driven scaffolding system. It makes it easy to create and maintain personal boilerplates that evolve over time.
What makes yogini different?
- Prompt-driven (via Inquirer) with easy prompt configuration
- Embedded file-copying logic, e.g.
{useSass}main.scss
- Templating with striate, a superset of ejs with better handling of multi-line blocks
Generators created by yogini are yeoman generators, so they can be published and consumed them like any other yeoman generator. You do not need to understand yeoman to use yogini.
Install
npm install -g yo # install yeoman
npm install -g generator-yogini # install yogini
Quick Start
1. Create your generator
mkdir generator-mygen # create a directory for your new generator
cd generator-mygen
yo yogini # generate a blank yogini generator
npm link # alias your generator to your globally
# installed npm modules so that you can run
# it with yeoman.
2. Use your generator
mkdir mygen1 # create a directory for your new project
cd mygen1
yo mygen # generate a new project
Architecture
Would you like some generator with your generator? I know, it's a bit confusing. There are four levels to be aware of:
- yo - Ye ol' scaffolding framework. Does all the hard work, like a good yeoman. Kind of a pain to work with as a developer.
-
yogini - Ye fancy
yo
wrapper that makes it easier to create, evolve, and maintain your generator. - generator-mygen - Your personal generator. Name it whatever you want. Typically you'll have a single generator and use its powerful conditional prompts to control which files are copied for the desired project type.
-
mygen1 - A cute little offspring from
generator-mygen
. A fresh, new project!
Building your generator
An initial yogini generator produces only a blank README, so you have to customize it to generate something useful.
TLDR;
- Drop files into
app/templates
. All files from this directory will be copied into your project directory when you run the generator. - Edit the Inquirer prompts in
app/yogini.json
. These will determine which files get copied (via prefixnotes) and what code gets copied (via striate).
1. Yogini file
Sample yogini.json file:
{
"prompts": [
{
"type": "confirm",
"name": "js",
"message": "Does your project use Javascript?",
},
{
"type": "confirm",
"name": "css",
"message": "Does your project use css?",
}
}
}
The above yogini.json file would prompt you with two questions every time you run your generator and store the answers in js
and css
variables. These variables drive the main two aspects of scaffolding: file copying and templating.
Advanced
You can use a yogini.js
file and define a parse
function which allows you to transform or add to the user-provided answers to the prompts:
module.exports = {
parse: (answers, prompts) => ({
authorName: 'Raine Revere',
authorUrl: 'https://github.com/raineorshine',
license: 'ISC',
username: 'raineorshine',
...answers,
camelize,
prettyArray,
}),
prompts: [
...
]
}
The prompts field also accepts a function which gets passed the generator instance:
{
"prompts": ({ env }) => [
{
"type": "text",
"name": "directory",
"default": env.cwd
}
}
}
2. File Copying
You can control which files in /app/templates
get copied into your new project by prefixing filenames with expressions that include prompt variables.
.
├── index.html
├── {js}scripts
│ └── main.js
└── {css}styles
└── main.css
In the above example, the scripts folder will only be copied if js
(as declared in yogini.json) is true, and the styles
folder will only be copied if css
is true.
- Empty expressions are a great way to include system and hidden files in your templates folder without them having an effect until they are copied:
{}package.json
{}.gitignore
- If a folder name only consists of an expression, all files will be copied to the parent folder:
main.js
{js}
├── 1.js
├── 2.js
└── 3.js
⇨
main.js
1.js
2.js
3.js
- Expressions can be any Javascript expression that evaluates to
boolean
:
{js && gulp}gulpfile.js
See prefixnote for the nitty-gritty.
3. Templating
You can use striate, a superset of ejs, to control which code gets generated within the files. The answers given to the prompts in yogini.json are available as variables within the scope of your template files.
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
>> if(css) {
<link rel='Stylesheet' type='text/css' href='styles/main.css'>
>> }
</head>
<body>
>> if(js) {
<script src='scripts/main.js'></script>
>> }
</body>
</html>
You can see a complete yogini generator with prompts, file prefixes, and templating at generator-yogini-sample.
License
ISC © Raine Revere
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