![]() ![]() ![]() I really appreciate any feedback, issue reports and improvements for it.įourth, the tutorial is not about the boilerplate project itself. People, who search about a React with Webpack setup, will hopefully always find an up to date version of this tutorial. If several of my tutorials reference this one tutorial to set up a React application with Webpack, I am forced to maintain it well. Third, a single source of truth has to be well maintained. Whenever there are updates regarding React, Webpack, Babel or Hot Module Replacement, I can come back to this one tutorial to keep all other tutorials updated. ![]() Second, it helps me to maintain the React setup at one place. Also people from other websites started to use this tutorial as guide for getting started with React and Webpack. Instead, I had several reasons why I extracted the setup process from another article of mine.įirst, I can reuse it for all my other tutorials on my website whenever there is a React project setup involved. But the article is not my attempt to advertise yet another React boilerplate project. As you might know, uncountable React boilerplate projects and repositories were created that way. I always had to setup the project from scratch, however, eventually I have created my own boilerplate project on GitHub for it. Personally I bootstrapped a lot of React projects over the last years. Part 3: How to set up Webpack 5 with Babel.Part 1: How to set up a modern JavaScript project.This tutorial is part 4 of 4 in the 'React Setup'-series. ![]()
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