This is the Learning MFE (micro-frontend application), which renders all learner-facing course pages (like the course outline, the progress page, actual course content, etc).
Please tag @edx/engage-squad on any PRs or issues. Thanks.
The devstack is currently recommended as a development environment for your
new MFE. If you start it with make dev.up.lms
that should give you
everything you need as a companion to this frontend.
Note that it is also possible to use Tutor to develop an MFE. You can refer to the relevant tutor-mfe documentation to get started using it.
To use this application, devstack must be running and you must be logged into it.
- Visit http://localhost:2000/course/course-v1:edX+DemoX+Demo_Course to view the demo course. You can replace
course-v1:edX+DemoX+Demo_Course
with a different course key.
1. Clone your new repo: ``git clone https://github.com/openedx/frontend-app-learning.git`` 2. Use node v18.x. The current version of the micro-frontend build scripts support node 18. Using other major versions of node *may* work, but this is unsupported. For convenience, this repository includes an .nvmrc file to help in setting the correct node version via `nvm <https://github.com/nvm-sh/nvm>`_. 3. Install npm dependencies: ``cd frontend-app-learning && npm ci`` 4. Start the dev server: ``npm start``
To develop locally on modules that are installed into this app, you'll need to create a module.config.js
file (which is git-ignored) that defines where to find your local modules, for instance:
module.exports = { /* Modules you want to use from local source code. Adding a module here means that when this app runs its build, it'll resolve the source from peer directories of this app. moduleName: the name you use to import code from the module. dir: The relative path to the module's source code. dist: The sub-directory of the source code where it puts its build artifact. Often "dist", though you may want to use "src" if the module installs React as a peer/dev dependency. */ localModules: [ { moduleName: '@openedx/paragon/scss', dir: '../paragon', dist: 'scss' }, { moduleName: '@openedx/paragon', dir: '../paragon', dist: 'dist' }, { moduleName: '@openedx/frontend-enterprise', dir: '../frontend-enterprise', dist: 'src' }, { moduleName: '@openedx/frontend-platform', dir: '../frontend-platform', dist: 'dist' }, ], };
See https://github.com/openedx/frontend-build#local-module-configuration-for-webpack for more details.
The Learning MFE is similar to all the other Open edX MFEs. Read the Open edX Developer Guide's section on MFE applications.
This MFE is configured via environment variables supplied at build time. All micro-frontends have a shared set of required environment variables, as documented in the Open edX Developer Guide under Required Environment Variables.
The learning micro-frontend also supports the following additional variables:
- CREDIT_HELP_LINK_URL
- A link to resources to help explain what course credit is and how to earn it.
- ENABLE_JUMPNAV
- Enables the new Jump Navigation feature in the course breadcrumbs, defaulted to the string 'true'. Disable to have simple hyperlinks for breadcrumbs. Setting it to any other value but 'true' ('false','I love flags', 'etc' would disable the Jumpnav). This feature flag is slated to be removed as jumpnav becomes default. Follow the progress of this ticket here: https://openedx.atlassian.net/browse/TNL-8678
- SOCIAL_UTM_MILESTONE_CAMPAIGN
This value is passed as the
utm_campaign
parameter for social-share links when celebrating learning milestones in the course. Optional.Example:
milestone
- SUPPORT_URL_CALCULATOR_MATH
A link that explains how to use the in-course calculator. You can use the one in the example below, if you don't want to have your own branded version.
- SUPPORT_URL_ID_VERIFICATION
A link that explains how to verify your ID. Shown in contexts where you need to verify yourself to earn a certificate. The example link below is probably too edx.org-specific to use for your own site.
Example: https://support.edx.org/hc/en-us/articles/206503858-How-do-I-verify-my-identity
- SUPPORT_URL_VERIFIED_CERTIFICATE
A link that explains what a verified certificate is. You can use the one in the example below, if you don't want to have your own branded version. Optional.
Example: https://support.edx.org/hc/en-us/articles/206502008-What-is-a-verified-certificate
- TWITTER_HASHTAG
This value is used in the Twitter social-share link when celebrating learning milestones in the course. Will prefill the suggested post with this hashtag. Optional.
Example:
brandedhashtag
- TWITTER_URL
A link to your Twitter account. The Twitter social-share link won't appear unless this is set. Optional.
Example: https://twitter.com/edXOnline
If you're having trouble, we have discussion forums at https://discuss.openedx.org where you can connect with others in the community.
Our real-time conversations are on Slack. You can request a Slack invitation, then join our community Slack workspace. Because this is a frontend repository, the best place to discuss it would be in the #wg-frontend channel.
For anything non-trivial, the best path is to open an issue in this repository with as many details about the issue you are facing as you can provide.
https://github.com/openedx/frontend-app-learning/issues
For more information about these options, see the Getting Help page.
Contributions are very welcome. Please read How To Contribute for details.
This project is currently accepting all types of contributions, bug fixes, security fixes, maintenance work, or new features. However, please make sure to have a discussion about your new feature idea with the maintainers prior to beginning development to maximize the chances of your change being accepted. You can start a conversation by creating a new issue on this repo summarizing your idea.
All community members are expected to follow the Open edX Code of Conduct.
The code in this repository is licensed under the AGPLv3 unless otherwise noted.
Please see LICENSE for details.
Please do not report security issues in public. Please email [email protected].