Curveball is the freshest new microframework for Typescript.

Since the last big announcement, there’s been a number new curveball users, and also a few framework changes.

I thought it would be nice to list some of the things we’ve been working on this month.

Starter template

Probably the most significant, curveball now has a starter template. This template is designed to be as minimal as possible, but just enough to get a working Curveball application in a few minutes.

The golden path looks like this:

git clone https://github.com/curveball/starter.git <project_name> cd <project_name> npm i npm run build npm start

We’ve made some progress on the website. It’s actually something we’re happy to share now. Thank you LFO Industries for the great design. They also made our logo and brand identity!

In the future, the website needs to host a solid tutorial and documentation for all the core plugins. Watch this space.

Accesslog plugin uses ANSI colors

The accesslog has two main purposes: to emit useful logging for production systems, and for a developer to be able to see what’s going on their console.

For the latter case, the accesslog middleware now detects if it’s running in a terminal, and emit colors, making it easier to spot errors.

Conditional request helpers

The core package now has a number of helper functions for conditional requests.

These helpers make it easier to evaluate conditions for If-Match , If-None-Match , If-Modified-Since and If-Unmodified-Since .

import { checkConditional } from ' @curveball/core ' ; const result = checkConditional ( ctx . request , lastModifiedDate , eTag );

The result variable will contain either 200 , 304 or 412 , which is a suggestion for what status code you might want to return.

In the future this utility will be used to automate conditional requests further using the controller.