npm install bae --save
Add these 2 lines in your package.json
"scripts": {
"dev": "bae dev",
"start": "bae"
}
Start the dev server with npm run dev
. You just setup server rendering with hot module replacement and hot reload!
Make pages like it's the 90s.
-
pages are routes:
pages/about
renders/about
of your website -
pages are rendered on the server
-
pages are
streamed
to the browser for quicktime-to-first-byte
-
built in code splitting, each page gets it's own
page.js
-
code shared between pages is served as
common.js
for long term caching -
pages/home.js
renders the homepage/
import React from 'react'
export default class extends React.Component {
constructor (props) {
super(props)
this.state = {message: 'hello'} // rendered on the server
}
componentDidMount () {
this.setState({message: 'hello world'}) // updated on the browser
}
render () {
return <div>{this.state.message}</div>
}
}
React has a lifecycle method that get's called on the server componentWillMount
that can be used to set data for server rendering. But, it does not support asynchronous data fetching before rendering the component.
bae introduces a new lifecycle method to pages that runs only on the server.
import React from 'react'
export default class extends React.Component {
constructor (props) {
super(props)
this.state = {username: 'siddharthkp'}
}
asyncComponentWillMount () {
/*
Return a promise.
It will get resolved on the server and passed as props to the component.
*/
return axios.get(`https://api.github.com/users/${this.state.username}`)
}
render () {
return <div>{this.props.bio}</div>
}
}
the usual, nothing special here.
comes with styled-components which gets rendered on the server.
keep your images, fonts, etc. in a directory named static
npm start
will compile, optimize and serve your app.
Check out the example applications to see how simple this is.
⭐ this repo
- init by default
- easy api for lazy loading components
- server worker support
- make first build faster
MIT © siddharthkp