A handy image editor powered by electron.
Start the app in the dev
environment. This starts the renderer process in hot-module-replacement mode and starts a webpack dev server that sends hot updates to the renderer process:
$ yarn dev
Alternatively, you can run the renderer and main processes separately. This way, you can restart one process without waiting for the other. Run these two commands simultaneously in different console tabs:
$ yarn start-renderer-dev
$ yarn start-main-dev
If you don't need autofocus when your files was changed, then run dev
with env START_MINIMIZED=true
:
$ START_MINIMIZED=true yarn dev
To package apps for the local platform:
$ yarn package
To package apps for all platforms:
First, refer to Multi Platform Build for dependencies.
Then,
$ yarn package-all
To package apps with options:
$ yarn package -- --[option]
💡 You can debug your production build with devtools by simply setting the DEBUG_PROD
env variable:
DEBUG_PROD=true yarn package
This app uses a two package.json structure. This means, you will have two package.json
files.
./package.json
in the root of your project./app/package.json
insideapp
folder
Rule of thumb is: all modules go into ./package.json
except native modules, or modules with native dependencies or peer dependencies. Native modules, or packages with native dependencies should go into ./app/package.json
.
- If the module is native to a platform (like node-postgres), it should be listed under
dependencies
in./app/package.json
- If a module is
import
ed by another module, include it independencies
in./package.json
. See this ESLint rule. Examples of such modules arematerial-ui
,redux-form
, andmoment
. - Otherwise, modules used for building, testing and debugging should be included in
devDependencies
in./package.json
.
Apache License 2.0 © Bharathvaj Ganesan