Codexini Install -

To begin, open your terminal or command prompt. It is a best practice to update your package manager to the latest version to ensure compatibility with Codexini’s modular dependencies. For npm users, run: npm install -g npm@latest For Yarn users, run: corepack enable Step 2: Global vs. Local Installation

By default, the server usually initializes on http://localhost:3000 . Open this URL in your browser to confirm the "Welcome to Codexini" splash page is visible. Troubleshooting Common Issues codexini install

Now that Codexini is successfully installed, you can begin defining your modules in the /src/modules directory. The framework's documentation provides extensive details on creating custom providers, handling asynchronous state, and deploying your final build to production environments. To begin, open your terminal or command prompt

Dependency Conflicts: If npm install fails, try clearing your cache with npm cache clean --force and deleting the node_modules folder and package-lock.json file before retrying. Next Steps handling asynchronous state

If you are adding Codexini to an existing project, navigate to your project root and execute: npm install @codexini/core Step 3: Initializing Your First Project

Operating System: Linux (Ubuntu 20.04+ recommended), macOS (11.0+), or Windows with WSL2. Runtime Environment: Node.js version 16.x or higher. Package Manager: npm (v7+) or Yarn. Version Control: Git installed and configured. Hardware: Minimum 4GB RAM and 500MB of free disk space. Step 1: Preparing Your Environment

You will be prompted to select a template. For beginners, the "Standard Modular" template is recommended as it includes pre-configured middleware and basic API routing. Step 4: Configuring Dependencies Navigate into your newly created directory: cd my-new-project Install the local dependencies defined in the boilerplate: npm install