The comprehensive toolkit for developing Next.js projects.
With NextJsLaunchpad, you get
- a robust foundation equipped with essential tools,
- configurations, and best practices to streamline your development workflow.
Say goodbye to setup headaches and hello to consistent code quality. Elevate your Next.js projects with NextJsLaunchpad.
- Next.js: Utilize the power of Next.js for server-rendered React applications.
- TypeScript: Enhance your development experience with TypeScript's static typing.
- Tailwind CSS: Rapidly build custom designs with Tailwind CSS's utility-first approach.
- ESLint: Enforce code quality standards and catch errors early with ESLint.
- Prettier: Keep your codebase clean and consistent with automatic code formatting using Prettier.
- Prettier Plugin Tailwindcss: Automatic sorting of tailwind classnames using the official prettier plugin.
- Prettier Plugin Sort Imports: Organize import declarations alphabetically within groups, which can help improve readability when working on larger projects.
- Husky: Ensure code quality and prevent bad commits with pre-commit hooks powered by Husky.
- Internationalization (i18n): Built-in support for multiple languages using next-intl, making it easy to create multilingual applications with locale-specific routing and translations.
NextJsLaunchpad comes with built-in internationalization support using next-intl. This integration provides:
- Route-based locale handling with
/[locale]/
directory structure - Easy-to-use translation hooks with
useTranslations
in server and client components.
Translation files are located in:
content/
βββ en.json
βββ fr.json
βββ [other-locales].json
To add a new language, we have to add the language JSON file to the content directory, which is in the root directory, that is our first step.
After that, we have to add the newly added language to the locales array in the navigation.ts file. Below is the content of the navigation.ts file, where we need to add the newly added language to the locales array:
import {defineRouting} from 'next-intl/routing';
import {createNavigation} from 'next-intl/navigation';
export const routing = defineRouting({
// A list of all locales that are supported
locales: ['en', 'fr', 'newLanguage'], // Add the new language code here
// Used when no locale matches
defaultLocale: 'en'
});
export const {Link, redirect, usePathname, useRouter, getPathname} =
createNavigation(routing);
To use strings from a language file in both client and server components, use the useTranslations
hook.
-
Import
useTranslations
:import { useTranslations } from 'next-intl';
-
Initialize useTranslations with a section:
const t = useTranslations('Home');
-
Fetch and use translations:
<h1>{t('welcomeMessage')}</h1>
Usage
npx create-next-app -e https://github.com/CreoWis/next-js-launchpad
.
βββ __tests__
βββ lib
βββ public
βββ src
βββ app
βββ components
βββ footer
βββ ui
βββ config
βββ constants
βββ context
βββ data
βββ db
βββ hooks
βββ modules
βββ queries
βββ services
βββ store
βββ utils
βββ styles
βββ types
__tests__: This folder contains all 'tests'.
lib: This folder may contain utility functions that can be converted later into packages that are used across multiple applications.
public: Self explanatory.
src/components: This directory contains your UI components. It's further subdivided into ui for generic UI components and shared for components that might be reused across different parts of your application.
src/constants: As the name suggests this folder contains constants.
src/context: The context folder in React JS is a folder that stores all of the context files for the application. Context is a way to pass data through the component tree without having to pass props down manually at every level. This can be useful for data that needs to be accessed by many components, such as the current user or the current state of the application.
src/data: The data folder in React JS is used to store data assets such as JSON files that contain information used in the application. It is similar to the assets folder, but it is specifically for storing data.
src/db: The db folder in React JS is typically used to store database-related files, such as database configuration files, migration scripts, and seed files.
src/hooks: This directory may house custom hooks that are used throughout your application.
src/modules: Modules which is also synonymous with 'sections/features' are logical groupings of code that make up the larger pages.
src/queries: This directory may contain GraphQL queries.
src/services: This folder helps separate the concerns of your application by isolating data fetching and manipulation logic from the components that render the UI.
src/store: The store folder in React JS is used to store global state data that is used throughout the application. This data can be anything from the current user's login status to the contents of a shopping cart. The store folder is typically created in the root directory of the project and contains a number of files, including the store itself, actions, and reducers.
src/utils: This directory may contain utility functions that do not make sense to convert into packages later.
styles: As the name suggests, this directory contains the css pages that is responsible for styling.
types: This folder contains TypeScript type definitions.
Throughout the project, unless otherwise mentioned, we will be using the following convention:
- folders and files are named in lowercase with words separated by hyphen (kebab-case). For example,
my-folder
ormy-file
. - Functions ->
camelCase
E.g. filterProductsByType , formatCurrency - Variables ->
camelCase
E.g. products, productsFiltered - Global constants -> all caps
UPPERCASE
. For example:MAX_VALUE
,MIN_VALUE
- Object constants -> Singular, capitalized with const assertion and optionally satisfies type (if there is one).
const ORDER_STATUS = {
pending: 'pending',
fulfilled: 'fulfilled',
error: 'error',
} as const satisfies OrderStatus;
- component names ->
PascalCase
E.g. export function Footer() {} - types should have
.d.ts
extension. E.g. root.d.ts - use arrow functions wherever possible.
- ui folder can contain granular level components like button, dialog, input etc which can be used to build other components.
- use given folders for various kinds of files. E.g. types should reside in types folder
NOTE: Check granular level conventions below for overiding rules (if any). If there are cases where industry standards over-ride the rules mentioned above, please feel free to use them. For example convention for naming hooks.
- ui components will go inside the ui folder
- each component will be a folder of its own. Sub-components, if any will reside in the same folder. Each such folder will have index.ts file which will export all components. E.g.
export { Footer as default } from './footer';
- separate folder for routes. E.g. about-us route will have a folder by the same name inside component folder which will have other components inside it.
Example: take a look at the footer
component.
camelCase
beginning with the word use e.g. useFetchData: A generic fetching hook for making HTTP requests to a specified endpoint.
Contributions are always welcome!
See CONTRIBUTING.md for ways to get started.
Please adhere to this project's code of conduct.
This is an OSS project by team CreoWis. We need all the support we can get. Please give this project a βοΈ to encourage and show that you liked it.
If you found the project helpful, consider supporting us with a coffee.
Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):
Rajarshi π» |
Joy Poddar π» |
Chhakuli Zingare π» |
Jaya Kumar π» |
Tapas Adhikary π |
Koustov π€ |
This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!