This is a utility package to assist with the upgrading of libraries and apps that rely on fluentui.
If you have a typescript application or library that relies on a non-current version of Fluent UI then you can run npx @fluentui/codemods
to immediately begin an upgrade of your codebase, saving you the trouble of doing so manually! This works by finding all the tsconfig files and then using those to find the relevant files to upgrade before running the updates on each of them!
If your application relies on any Fluent UI package simply run
npx @fluentui/codemods
and the upgrade will begin if there are any relevant codemods to apply to your codebase!
Run
yarn
yarn start-test
To start testing the codemods
Add your codemods to the ./src/mods
folder with .mod.ts|tsx
as the file type.
Run
yarn build
To build
Run
npm pack
from the codemods package root to create a tar file for testing. Move the created tar file to the package you want to test and run
npx <tarFileName>
- There are currently 4 npx flags:
-
-n
Specify name(s) of codemod(s) to run. You can find these names incodemods/src/codemods/mods
. Make sure that they areenabled
before running them, or else they won't run! -
-r
Specify regex pattern(s) to identify mod(s) to run. -
-e
Boolean flag that flips the inclusion of the specify mods. Use this flag with the selective flags-n
or-r
to opt to exclude the selected mods rather than include them. -
-l
List the names of all enabled codemods. Mods that exist but aren't enabled will not appear, as running them would do nothing. -
-c
For developers who don't want to worry about the command line, they can create amodConfig.json
file in their repo. The template for the file looks like this, wherestringFilters
andregexFilters
would correspond to inputs following-n
and-c
, respectively:
{ "stringFilters": [], "regexFilters": [], "includeMods": true }
-
- If you specify no flags, npx will run all
enabled
codeods.
- Write a
flag
utility that will enable devs to note when a part of a file needs to be changed, but cannot be done via codemod. - Implement a command that will execute all listed codemods on a single file.
- Will need to think of a way to specify the order. Maybe something like tasks in Just.
- This could be helpful when you want to run a set of codemods based on a single condition, like the presence of a specific import
ts-morph:
- ts-morph does most of the heavy lifting. Don't be afraid to use it directly rather than trying to abstract into a utility.
- One of the most useful types of the syntax tree to get is the
SyntaxKind.block
it is the equivalent of the{ stuff }
that is located in a function declaration and is where a lot of code lives. - You can only access JSX props on syntax kinds of
SyntaxKind.JSXOpeningElement
andSyntaxKind.JSXSelfClosingElement
-
getChildIndex
returns the child index respective to the immediate parent. It resets at each level. So consider the following:
And then considerfunction foo() { const childIndex0 = "some other value"; const childIndex1 = "some value"; return childIndex2; }
function foo() { const childIndex0 = "some other value"; const childIndex1 = "some value"; const nestedFunctionChildIndex2 = () => { const childIndex0; // childindex is now 0 } return childIndex3 }