Official CKEditor 5 rich text editor component for Vue.js.
See the Vue.js component article in the CKEditor 5 documentation.
After cloning this repository, install necessary dependencies:
npm install
npm run tests -- [additional options]
# or
npm t -- [additional options]
The command accepts the following options:
--coverage
(-c
) – Whether to generate the code coverage.--source-map
(-s
) – Whether to attach the source maps.--watch
(-w
) – Whether to watch test files.--reporter
(-r
) – Reporter for Karma (default:mocha
, can be changed todots
).--browsers
(-b
) – Browsers that will be used to run tests (default:Chrome
, available:Firefox
,BrowserStack_Edge
andBrowserStack_Safari
).
Note: If you would like to use the BrowserStack_*
browser, you need to specify the BROWSER_STACK_USERNAME
and BROWSER_STACK_ACCESS_KEY
as
an environment variable, e.g.:
BROWSER_STACK_USERNAME=[...] BROWSER_STACK_ACCESS_KEY=[...] npm t -- -b BrowserStack_Edge,BrowserStack_Safari -c
If you are going to change the component (src/ckeditor.js
) or plugin (src/plugin.js
) files, remember about rebuilding the package. You can use npm run develop
in order to do it automatically.
Build a minified version of the package that is ready to publish:
npm run build
npm run changelog
When symlinking the component in an application generated using Vue CLI, make sure your vue.config.js
file configures webpack in the following way:
module.exports = {
configureWebpack: {
resolve: {
symlinks: false
}
}
};
Otherwise, the application will fail to load the component correctly and, as a result, it will throw a build error.
Before starting to release the package, you need to generate the changelog.
npm run release
Note: Only the dist/
directory will be published.
Licensed under the terms of GNU General Public License Version 2 or later. For full details about the license, please check the LICENSE.md file.