10
Very Useful Features Provided By Create React App You Might Not Know
In this article, we will explore the lesser-known but very useful features provided by create-react-app.
So let's get started!
Sometimes we need to test our app on HTTPS to check if all the APIs are working properly before deploying to production.
Create-react-app provides an easy way of doing that.
Create a .env
(dot env) file in your project folder and add HTTPS=true
inside it like this:
HTTPS=true
and restart your app by running yarn start
or npm start
command and now your entire application will be served on HTTPS.
In every application, we have import statements where we have to come out of the current folder to reach another file like this:
import { login } from '../actions/login';
import profileReducer from '../reducers/profile';
So we have to check which folder we are in and then add those numbers of double dots to import another file. Create-react-app makes it easy to handle that.
Create a new file jsconfig.json
in your project folder and add the following code inside it:
{
"compilerOptions": {
"baseUrl": "./src"
}
}
Here we specified the base folder where all your files are present. (mostly it’s the src folder in the React application).
So now we can simplify the above imports as shown below:
import { login } from 'actions/login';
import profileReducer from 'reducers/profile';
With this configuration, it will take src
as a base URL now, so we only need to specify the folder path starting inside the src
folder as we've done in the above code.
This will avoid adding extra dots for deeply nested paths.
Environment variables are important because they allow us to keep private information secure. It can be a username or password or API key.
They also allow us to supply our app with different data values based on the environment (dev, staging, prod, etc).
Create-react-app allows us to read environment variables without using any external library.
To create environment variables in React, create a new .env
(dot env) file and declare the environment variable inside it like this:
REACT_APP_API_BASE_URL=environment_variable_value
REACT_APP_PASSWORD=your_password
It’s important to start your environment variable name with REACT_APP_
so create-react-app will be able to read it.
Once you create a .env
file with your variables, it will be available in your React app inside the process.env
object.
process.env.REACT_APP_API_BASE_URL
process.env.REACT_APP_PASSWORD
Check out the below Code Sandbox Demo to see it in action.
Note: You should not push the .env
file to your git repository for privacy reasons so make sure to add the .env
entry in your .gitignore
file.
Check out my recently published Mastering Redux course.
In this course, you will learn:
- Basic and advanced Redux
- How to manage the complex state of array and objects
- How to use multiple reducers to manage complex redux state
- How to debug Redux application
- How to use Redux in React using react-redux library to make your app reactive.
- How to use redux-thunk library to handle async API calls and much more
and then finally we'll build a complete food ordering app from scratch with stripe integration for accepting payments and deploy it to the production.
Want to stay up to date with regular content regarding JavaScript, React, Node.js? Follow me on LinkedIn.
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