0.0.16 • Published 5 years ago

hot-server-poll v0.0.16

Weekly downloads
2
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
5 years ago

hot-server

No config hot reloading for sketching with code.

Instructions

Install:

npm install -g hot-server

Serve directory statically:

hot-server

Save changes to *.js or *.css and they'll be injected via a websocket without a full refresh.

Since your whole script file reruns, you'll probably want to clean up anything it adds to the page with something like var svg = d3.select('#graph').html('').append('svg'). Stopping any timers and clearing any listeners that don't reset is also a good idea:

if (window.timer) timer.stop()
window.timer = d3.timer(function(t){
  // cool animation code
})

To persist data between refreshes, declare and initialize your data in a separate file from the rest of your code. Only the changed file will rerun. Or only initialize your data on the first run:

window.points = window.points || d3.range(50)
    .map(function(d){
      return [Math.random() * width, Math.random() * height]
    })

Default port is 3989; hot-server --port=4444 sets the port.

Is this the right tool for me?

If you're building an actual webapp, maybe not! This is a naive approach to hot reloading that will not work with more complicated code. Webpack might be a better option:

Or a even a different language:

But! If you're mostly working on short, simple pieces and dislike yak shaving config files this might be a good fit. It is as simple to use as python -m http.server with the added benefit of seemly magically updating pages without a refresh.

The implementation is also simple—just 50 lines of code for the server and 10 for the client—and you might be able to re-purpose it. I incorporated a modified version into a slow make/requirejs/grunt build system at work and reduced the time it took to see the result of changing my code from ~6 seconds to 0.