optinmamanagementvue/analystview/README.md

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# Frappe UI Starter
This template should help get you started developing custom frontend for Frappe
apps with Vue 3 and the Frappe UI package.
![Auth](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/34810212/236846289-ac31c292-81ea-4456-be65-95773a4049be.png)
![Home](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/34810212/236846299-fd534e2b-1c06-4f01-a4f2-91a27547cd55.png)
This boilerplate sets up Vue 3, Vue Router, TailwindCSS, and Frappe UI out of
the box. It also has basic authentication frontend.
## Docs
[Frappe UI Website](https://frappeui.com)
## Usage
This template is meant to be cloned inside an existing Frappe App. Assuming your
apps name is `todo`. Clone this template in the root folder of your app using `degit`.
```
cd apps/todo
npx degit NagariaHussain/doppio_frappeui_starter frontend
cd frontend
yarn
yarn dev
```
In a development environment, you need to put the below key-value pair in your `site_config.json` file:
```
"ignore_csrf": 1
```
This will prevent `CSRFToken` errors while using the vite dev server. In production environment, the `csrf_token` is attached to the `window` object in `index.html` for you.
The Vite dev server will start on the port `8080`. This can be changed from `vite.config.js`.
The development server is configured to proxy your frappe app (usually running on port `8000`). If you have a site named `todo.test`, open `http://todo.test:8080` in your browser. If you see a button named "Click to send 'ping' request", congratulations!
If you notice the browser URL is `/frontend`, this is the base URL where your frontend app will run in production.
To change this, open `src/router.js` and change the base URL passed to `createWebHistory`.
## Resources
- [Vue 3](https://v3.vuejs.org/guide/introduction.html)
- [Vue Router](https://next.router.vuejs.org/guide/)
- [Frappe UI](https://github.com/frappe/frappe-ui)
- [TailwindCSS](https://tailwindcss.com/docs/utility-first)
- [Vite](https://vitejs.dev/guide/)