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Web Fundamentals on DevSite

Build Status License

Welcome to the new Web Fundamentals! An effort to showcase best practices and tools for modern Web Development.

What's changed?

  • We're now using the DevSite infrastructure
    • New style guide
    • New widgets allow inline JavaScript, common links, related guide and more
  • Jekyll has been eliminated. Instead, pages are rendered at request time
  • Front-matter has been eliminated from the markdown, but files now require a simple set of tags

What stays the same?

Cloning the repo

If you have a high-bandwidth connection, I recommend starting with a fresh clone of the repo.

git clone https://github.com/google/WebFundamentals.git

Getting set up

The new DevSite infrastructure simplifies the dependencies a lot. Ensure that you have Python, Node 10-12, and the Google Cloud SDK already installed.

Login to Google Cloud via command line.

  1. Run npm install (needed for the build process)

Building the auto-generated files

Some files (contributors includes, some pages for updates, showcases, etc.) are automatically generated. The first time you clone the repo and run npm install, this is done for you. However, when you add a case study, update, etc., you'll need to re-build those files using:

npm run build

Starting Local Server

To view the site locally, just run:

npm start

Note: The first time you start the server, you may need to run start-appengine.sh and answer any prompts provided by dev_appserver.py.

Updating the code labs

To update the Code Labs, you'll need the claat tool and access to the original Doc files. This will likely only work for Googlers.

  1. Download the claat tool and place it in your tools directory
  2. Run tools/update-codelabs.sh
  3. Check the latest changes into GitHub

Starting the development server

  1. Run npm start in the terminal.

Testing your changes before submitting a PR

Please run your changes through npm test before submitting a PR. The test looks for things that may cause issues with DevSite and tries to keep our content consistent. It's part of the deployment process, so PRs will fail if there are any errors! To run:

npm test

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