Composing Generators
Generators are useful individually, but reusing and composing generators allows you to build whole workflows out of simpler building blocks.
Using Nx Devkit Generators
Nx Devkit generators can be imported and invoked like any javascript function. They often return a Promise
, so they can be used with the await
keyword to mimic synchronous code. Because this is standard javascript, control flow logic can be adjusted with if
blocks and for
loops as usual.
import { libraryGenerator } from '@nx/js';
export default async function (tree: Tree, schema: any) {
await libraryGenerator(
tree, // virtual file system tree
{ name: schema.name } // options for the generator
);
}
Using jscodeshift Codemods
Codemods created for use with jscodeshift
can be used within Nx Devkit generators using the visitNotIgnoredFiles
helper function. This way you can compose codemods with other generators while retaining --dry-run
and Nx Console compatibilities.
import { Tree, visitNotIgnoredFiles } from '@nx/devkit';
import { applyTransform } from 'jscodeshift/src/testUtils';
import arrowFunctionsTransform from './arrow-functions';
// The schema path can be an individual file or a directory
export default async function (tree: Tree, schema: { path: string }): any {
visitNotIgnoredFiles(tree, schema.path, (filePath) => {
const input = tree.read(filePath).toString();
const transformOptions = {};
const output = applyTransform(
{ default: arrowFunctionsTransform, parser: 'ts' },
transformOptions,
{ source: input, path: filePath }
);
tree.write(filePath, output);
});
}