Example project using PureScript with webpack.
bower install
npm install
On most system this should be enough, because npm should take care of extra
depedencies, including purescript
and purescript-psa
.
Note, that this will use the compiler from node_modules/.bin/
, not
the one that might have installed globally or the one that may be present
in your $PATH
. This will fail on systems like Nix, where you'll need to use
globally installed binaries (patched version of psc
, while npm
will supply
unpatched version).
npm run webpack
npm start
To test this in the browser with the webpack-dev-server.
bower install
npm install
# http://localhost:4008/
npm run webpack:server
npm install
should have installed extra binary dependencies required to run
this example to node_modules/.bin
. However, if you want to use the psc
compiler that you have installed globally (i.e., the one in $PATH
), you can
just call webpack directly:
webpack
As always, you can use webpack --watch
option to enable automatic recompilation
on file changes.
However, if you want to use globally installed binaries, this means that you'll
have to take care of all binary dependencies yourself. Right now, this includes
having in your $PATH
:
psc
that comes frompurescript
(haskellPackages.purescript
on Nix)psa
that comes frompurescript-psa
(on Nix, you'll have to install it yourself vianode2nix -i node-packages.json
andnix-env -f default.nix -iA purescript.psa
; node-packages.json is a file you create yourself containing[ "purescript-psa" ]
). You can remove the dependency onpsa
by changingpsc: 'psa'
topsc: 'psc'
insidewebpack.config.js
.psa
just provides clearer compilation messages compared topsc
webpack
(on Nix,nodePackages.webpack
)node
that comes fromnodejs