Because SRP -> Robert C(ecil) Martin -> Cecile
By the way, Cecile originates from latin "Caecilius" which means "blind". This makes sense in our case: storage is "blind", meaning it doesn't know anything from other concerns, especially implementing business rules.
✨ Your new, shiny Nx workspace is almost ready ✨.
Learn more about this workspace setup and its capabilities or run npx nx graph
to visually explore what was created. Now, let's get you up to speed!
Click here to finish setting up your workspace!
npx nx g @nx/js:lib packages/pkg1 --publishable --importPath=@my-org/pkg1
To build the library use:
npx nx build pkg1
To run any task with Nx use:
npx nx <target> <project-name>
These targets are either inferred automatically or defined in the project.json
or package.json
files.
More about running tasks in the docs »
To version and release the library use
npx nx release
Pass --dry-run
to see what would happen without actually releasing the library.
Learn more about Nx release »
Nx automatically updates TypeScript project references in tsconfig.json
files to ensure they remain accurate based on your project dependencies (import
or require
statements). This sync is automatically done when running tasks such as build
or typecheck
, which require updated references to function correctly.
To manually trigger the process to sync the project graph dependencies information to the TypeScript project references, run the following command:
npx nx sync
You can enforce that the TypeScript project references are always in the correct state when running in CI by adding a step to your CI job configuration that runs the following command:
npx nx sync:check
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: