833ec518b4
* Bot linking button functional. * Implemented initial prototype of new Twitch signup page. * Removed old Twitch signup page. * Moved new Twitch page to correct URL. * Twitch account linking functional. * Fixed charity link. * Changed to point to live bot server. * Slightly improve spacing and alignment on Twitch page * Tidy up, handle some errors when talking to bot * Seriously do the thing where Twitch link is hidden by default Co-authored-by: Marshall Polaris <marshall@pol.rs> |
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.. | ||
components | ||
hooks | ||
lib | ||
pages | ||
posts | ||
public | ||
.eslintrc.js | ||
.gitignore | ||
.prettierignore | ||
.yarnrc | ||
get-manalink-url.ts | ||
next-env.d.ts | ||
next.config.js | ||
package.json | ||
postcss.config.js | ||
README.md | ||
tailwind.config.js | ||
tsconfig.json |
Manifold Markets web app
Getting started
To run the development server, install Yarn 1.x, and then in this directory:
yarn
to install all dependenciesyarn dev:dev
starts a development web server, pointing at the development database- Your site will be available on http://localhost:3000
Check package.json for other command-line tasks. (e.g. yarn dev
will point the development server at the prod
database. yarn emulate
will run against a local emulated database, if you are serving it via yarn serve
from the
functions/
package.)
Tech stack
Manifold's website uses Next.js, which is a React-based framework that handles concerns like routing, builds, and a development server. It's also integrated with Vercel, which is responsible for hosting the site and providing some other production functionality like serving the API. The application code is written exclusively in Typescript. Styling is done via CSS-in-JS in the React code and uses Tailwind CSS classes.
Building and deployment
Vercel's GitHub integration monitors the repository and automatically builds (next build
) and deploys both the main
branch (to production) and PR branches (to ephemeral staging servers that can be used for testing.)
Parts of the file structure that directly map to HTTP endpoints are organized specially per Next.js's prescriptions:
public/
These are static files that will be served by Next verbatim.
pages/
These are components that Next's router is aware of and interprets as page roots per their filename,
e.g. the React component in pages/portfolio.tsx is rendered on the user portfolio page at /portfolio. You should
look in here or in components/
to find any specific piece of UI you are interested in working on.
pages/api/
Modules under this route are specially interpreted by Next/Vercel as functions that will be hosted by Vercel. This is where the public Manifold HTTP API lives.
Contributing
Please format the code using Prettier; you can run yarn format
to invoke it manually. It also runs by
default as a pre-commit Git hook thanks to the pretty-quick package. You may wish to use some kind of fancy editor
integration to format it in your editor.
Developer Experience TODOs
- Prevent git pushing if there are Typescript errors?