I'm using Vite/Rollup with Vue. I'm trying to bundle my SPA app for production. I'm using a plugin to split the vendor bundle from my app code. So when I run npm run build It creates 4 files with chunk ids in them. When I'm serving my index.html file to someone that goes to my site, how do I get my index.html to import the correct/newest bundle chunks?
Is there like a plugin or something that will generate a new index.html file with the correct script tags and srcs or am I meant to first run the build command, then update my index.html, then push the changes to github and have it deploy from there?
This is what npm run build produces public/build/manifest.json 0.54 kB public/build/assets/app-1ed9b925.css 0.24 kB │ gzip: 0.14 kB public/build/assets/app-6a6cfbe0.css 12.69 kB │ gzip: 3.26 kB public/build/assets/app-1e651455.js 20.14 kB │ gzip: 6.29 kB public/build/assets/vendor-0e7024e9.js 179.91 kB │ gzip: 62.27 kB
This is the order I believe I'm suppose to load the resources in. <script src="/js/manifest.js"></script> <script src="/js/vendor-0e7024e9.js"></script> <script src="/js/app-1e651455.js"></script> ... then CSS
Type assertions are useful in edge cases. For example at system boundaries when you get some unknown shape and want to verify it's a known one. Usually paired with a type guard or something that actually does the verification. But most type assertions outside these are probably wrong.
And the double assertions are almost guaranteed to be wrong. I cannot actually think of a legitimate reason to use them. I mostly know they exist because on SO there are questions every so often that go "I used 42 as any as string but it fails when I try .toUpperCase!!111!!"
I'm quite proud. I learned the "drilling" term yesterday and I got to use it already :)
But yeah - forwarding props through components. Because you need it in component F but you can only get them from A, you need to provide them through out the entire chain A -> B -> C -> D -> E -> F
Btw, the diagram comes from this page on Vue. Describes an alternative which is "provides" which you'd use in A and then "inject" which is in F and this you skip the chain and more directly allows usage. I'm still not sure how good that solution is. Need to see it more in practice.
Yes, it would avoid the forwarding through the chain. But it's sort of "globals" for your components. And now you have to manage those.
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