Experimenting with using the Observable Framework to explore the structure and contents of an RO-Crate
To start the local preview server, run:
npm run dev
Then visit http://localhost:3000 to preview your project.
For more, see https://observablehq.com/framework/getting-started.
A typical Framework project looks like this:
.
├─ docs
│ ├─ components
│ │ └─ timeline.js # an importable module
│ ├─ data
│ │ ├─ launches.csv.js # a data loader
│ │ └─ events.json # a static data file
│ ├─ example-dashboard.md # a page
│ ├─ example-report.md # another page
│ └─ index.md # the home page
├─ .gitignore
├─ observablehq.config.ts # the project config file
├─ package.json
└─ README.md
docs
- This is the “source root” — where your source files live. Pages go here. Each page is a Markdown file. Observable Framework uses file-based routing, which means that the name of the file controls where the page is served. You can create as many pages as you like. Use folders to organize your pages.
docs/index.md
- This is the home page for your site. You can have as many additional pages as you’d like, but you should always have a home page, too.
docs/data
- You can put data loaders or static data files anywhere in your source root, but we recommend putting them here.
docs/components
- You can put shared JavaScript modules anywhere in your source root, but we recommend putting them here. This helps you pull code out of Markdown files and into JavaScript modules, making it easier to reuse code across pages, write tests and run linters, and even share code with vanilla web applications.
observablehq.config.ts
- This is the project configuration file, such as the pages and sections in the sidebar navigation, and the project’s title.
Command | Description |
---|---|
npm install |
Install or reinstall dependencies |
npm run dev |
Start local preview server |
npm run build |
Build your static site, generating ./dist |
npm run deploy |
Deploy your project to Observable |
npm run clean |
Clear the local data loader cache |
npm run observable |
Run commands like observable help |