To see the project's module structure you can run:
npx nx graph
Make sure to put your Supabase project URL and Token on:
ng_sota/libs/supabase/src/lib/supabase/supabase.config.ts
To run the dev server for your app, use:
npx nx serve ng_sota
To create a production bundle:
npx nx build ng_sota
To see all available targets to run for a project, run:
npx nx show project ng_sota
These targets are
either inferred automatically
or defined in the project.json
or package.json
files.
More about running tasks in the docs »
While you could add new projects to your workspace manually, you might want to leverage Nx plugins and their code generation feature.
Use the plugin's generator to create new projects.
To generate a new application, use:
npx nx g @nx/angular:app demo
To generate a new library, use:
npx nx g @nx/angular:lib mylib
To generate a new component, use:
npx nx g @nx/angular:component mycomponent
You can use npx nx list
to get a list of installed plugins. Then, run npx nx list <plugin-name>
to learn about more
specific capabilities of a particular plugin.
Alternatively, install Nx Console
to browse plugins and generators in your IDE.
Nx Console is an editor extension that enriches your developer experience. It lets you run tasks, generate code, and improves code autocompletion in your IDE. It is available for VSCode and IntelliJ.
Learn more:
- Learn more about this workspace setup
- Learn about Nx on CI
- Releasing Packages with Nx release
- What are Nx plugins?
And join the Nx community:
To build the docker image of the project:
docker build -t ngsota . --no-cache
To run the docker image:
docker run -d -p 5173:5173 --name ngsota-contianer ngsota
Lint check all modules code:
npx nx run-many --target=lint --all
Test check all modules code:
npx nx run-many --target=test --all