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This is a react application built using next.js. It is statically exported to markup + javascript. It is using redux-bundler (an abstraction on top of redux + reselect) for state management. Most of the content is written in Markdown, parsed using MDX
.
Be sure to have node + npm/yarn installed before getting started.
Fork the repo and pull it down to your machine, and then in the directory run:
npm install
npm run dev
OR
yarn install
yarn dev
Running the dev
task will launch a local instance of the site with all the modern advantages of front end work (hot module reloading, etc).
Next.js is first and foremost a directory/file based framework. If you look in the pages
directory, you should get a pretty good idea of the routes contained within this project. To add a new route, simply create a file or folder with the route you want to add, and start coding! Files can be *.js
or *.mdx
The blog gets its data from an external source (Ghost) and is parsed via /blog
and /blog/single
. Even though the data is external, you can still get some insight into how the routes work via the directory structure.
Because we are exporting the react application to run in places only static sites can, we have to pass our routes to the next.config.js
file. We have a routes.js
file that contains our static and dynamic routes. When adding a new page, make sure to add the path to this file.
Next.js has a function called exportPathMap
in the next.config.js
which allows the export to know what to export! You can also fetch data at this point to generate dynamic pages. Take a look at next.config.js
to see an example.