This repository contains a stub code, based on a modified SAFE 3.0 template. The SAFE template can be used to generate a full-stack web application using the SAFE Stack. If you want to learn more about the template read the quick start guide.
This code has been modified from the original SAFE template in the following ways:
- Fable.Remoting has been replaced with Thot.Fetch and Thoth.Json. While Fable.Remoting is nice and provides much better type safety on API calls, it also hides a lot of details. Fable.Remoting is a RPC framework, and while RPC can seem to make life really nice and dandy, it has been criticized.
- Saturn is only used to configure the web server pipeline. The Saturn routing has been replaced with straight Giraffe. Again, Saturn does a wonderful job, but hides a lot of detail.
In this exercise you will combine the skills and knowledge from the previous exercises. The task is to create a client-server web application, for processing numerical CSV data, a sort of poor man's spread sheet:
- Create a web interface with a text input for filling in numerical CSV, and a submit button to send the contents to the server
- Create a server with a REST JSON API endpoint to receive the CSV as a string. Parse the string, and return the numerical data in a suitable format. Take care of reporting back errors, in case the parsing fails.
- Render the parsed CSV in a table, dynamically replacing the text input box. Add buttons to sum and multiply the table data both horizontally and vertically.
- Add a reset button to start over.
- Bonus: Add a file upload button.
Feel free to play with ideas and features if you feel like. Have fun!
You'll need to install the following pre-requisites in order to build SAFE applications
- The .NET 5.0 SDK
- Fable 3 installed as a global tool:
dotnet tool install -g fable
- The NPM package manager.
- Node LTS installed for the front end components.
Before you run the project for the first time only you must install dotnet "local tools" with this command:
dotnet tool restore
There are two ways of bulding and running the application, either manually or automagically. The toplevel folder contains a F# project Build.fsproj
which run, will do (almost) all everything automatically. See Build.fs
and FAKE for more information.
To concurrently run the server and the client components in watch mode use the following command:
dotnet run
Then open http://localhost:8080
in your browser.
The build project in root directory contains a couple of different build targets. You can specify them after --
(target name is case-insensitive).
To run concurrently server and client tests in watch mode (you can run this command in parallel to the previous one in new terminal):
dotnet run -- RunTests
Client tests are available under http://localhost:8081
in your browser and server tests are running in watch mode in console.
Finally, there are Bundle
and Azure
targets that you can use to package your app and deploy to Azure, respectively:
dotnet run -- Bundle
dotnet run -- Azure
npm install
dotnet restore
# In terminal 1
cd src/Server; dotnet run
# In terminal 2
cd src/Client; fable watch --run webpack-dev-server