# scaffold ## Intro Use scaffold to setup a new project with a directory skeleton of your design, and if you'd like, it can also automatically initialize local, remote and gitea git repositories for the new project. ## What scaffold does - A new project directory is created - Your project skeleton/template is copied from your config/projectType/sample directory - your setup/initialization commmands are run - And if you enable them - a git repository is initialized in the project directory - a remote repository is created and setup - a gitea repository is created and setup ## Installation 1. Grab a binary version for your system from the releases page. 2. Put it in a directory that is on your path. 3. Now configure your preferred setups/layouts/skeletons/templates for your projects. ## Configuration On linux, the configuration directory will be at /home/user/.config/devel/scaffold For the windows versions, you might want to look at your User_Configuration_Directories location, and change it according to your needs. On windows it's value is the %APPDATA% environment variable. In a PowerShell, use `Get Child-Item Env:` to display all the environment variables. Then `[Environment]::SetEnvironmentVariable("APPDATA","C:\Users\You\Wherever-you-like\","User")` to set the new value. It's a little simpler at a command prompt -- type the command `set` and hit `Enter`. See what `APPDATA` is currently set to. Change it with `setx APPDATA "C:\Users\You\SomeWhere"`. The examples directory contains an example-scaffold-projectType.toml configuration file. Place a copy in each projectType directory, adjusted to your preferences per the given project type. ## Naming convention warning Creating repositories on gitea via a ssh push, the standard method, has a side effect -- the project name is forced to lowercase. There are no configuration options to change this. Please see gitea and it's documentation for full explanations. Here are a couple of thoughts: 1. Adapt and only create projects using lowercase (myspecialproject) or lower_snake_case (my_special_project) or use hyphens between words (my-special-project) - all lowercase is universally accepted but hard to read for multi-word project names - lower_snake_case is not universally accepted - hyphens might not be what you are used to, or prefer, but it seems to be universally accepted and reasonably readable. 2. If you insist on CamelCase project names -- a work around would be to manually create a reposity with the CamelCase name you want via gitea's web UI. And then use scaffold on your development machine with the -c flag eg. `scaffold -c go MySpecialProject` to have scaffold clone it from gitea, build it out according to your skeleton/templates, and then push the changes. The whole idea or point to little utilities like this is to simplify things - to get what you want. In this case, it seems, that to get what you want means one extra step --OR-- changing your personal preference for the names of things. ## The `scaffold` command | Command | Description | | ------- | ----------- | | scaffold | The program name | | flags: -i | Display the available project types and the build and version information about the program. | | -c | Clone a gitea repository, not create one. Then push the new structure to it. | | **Examples:** | | | scaffold *ProjectType* *new-project-name* | Creates a new project and then creates new remote repositories and pushes changes | | scaffold -c *ProjectType* *GiteaRepositoryName* | clones the repo from gitea and then fills it according to your skeleton/template, and then pushes the changes.| ## Configuration of samples ![Example Directory Structure](assets/images/dirtree-pic.png) The image should explain alot quickly. The go, go-cli, go-web, hs, js, py and svelte directories define the project types available to scaffold. Arrange the contents of the sample directory, within each project type directory, to your preferred layout for each language/use-case. ## Git Git is available to be used as the version control system for new projects. Select/Deselect within the `scaffold-.toml` file. *Please Note* that if you also use git to track your configuration files and sample directories, then a `.gitignore` file within your sample directory will interfere with git's ability to track your skeletons/templates properly. So, to allow for this, put what you normally would in a `.gitignore` file instead into a file named `GITIGNORE` in your sample directory. And scaffold will convert it to a `.gitignore` file within your newProject directory. If you are NOT using git to track your project types and samples/skeletons/templates, then no problem, just place a .gitignore file within the sample directory as you would any other file.