This is a test repo to try out different techniques for integrating — or sharing a code base between, anyway — an Nx monorepo with legacy Node stuff like Angular apps and Node programs, and new spiffy stuff like Deno and JSR.
nx run-many --target test
# or
nx run-many --target test --skip-nx-cache
original readme follows
✨ This workspace has been generated by Nx, Smart Monorepos · Fast CI. ✨
Enhance your Nx experience by installing Nx Console for your favorite editor. Nx Console provides an interactive UI to view your projects, run tasks, generate code, and more! Available for VSCode, IntelliJ and comes with a LSP for Vim users.
Add Nx plugins to leverage their code generators and automated, inferred tasks.
# Add plugin
npx nx add @nx/react
# Use code generator
npx nx generate @nx/react:app demo
# Run development server
npx nx serve demo
# View project details
npx nx show project demo --web
Run npx nx list
to get a list of available plugins and whether they have generators. Then run npx nx list <plugin-name>
to see what generators are available.
Learn more about code generators and inferred tasks in the docs.
To execute tasks with Nx use the following syntax:
npx nx <target> <project> <...options>
You can also run multiple targets:
npx nx run-many -t <target1> <target2>
..or add -p
to filter specific projects
npx nx run-many -t <target1> <target2> -p <proj1> <proj2>
Targets can be defined in the package.json
or projects.json
. Learn more in the docs.
Nx comes with local caching already built-in (check your nx.json
). On CI you might want to go a step further.
Run npx nx graph
to show the graph of the workspace.
It will show tasks that you can run with Nx.