Skip to content

pixel-point/taipy-website

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Pixel Point Next.js TypeScript Tailwind Starter

This is a Next.js project bootstrapped with create-next-app.

Table of Contents

Getting Started

  1. Clone this repository or hit "Use this template" button

    git clone git@github.com:pixel-point/nextjs-typescript-tailwind-starter.git
  2. Install dependencies

npm install

Usage

npm run dev

Open http://localhost:3000 with your browser to see the result.

You can start editing the page by modifying app/page.tsx. The page auto-updates as you edit the file.

Learn More

To learn more about Next.js, take a look at the following resources:

You can check out the Next.js GitHub repository - your feedback and contributions are welcome!

Deploy on Vercel

The easiest way to deploy your Next.js app is to use the Vercel Platform from the creators of Next.js.

Check out our Next.js deployment documentation for more details.

Project Structure

├── public
├── src
│   ├── components
│   │  ├── pages — React components that are being used specifically on a certain page
│   │  └── shared — React components that are being used across the whole website
│   ├── app
│   ├── svgs — a folder for vector images
│   ├── images — a folder for bitmap images
│   ├── lib
│   ├── types
├── next.config.js — Main configuration file for a Next.js site. Read more about it [here](https://nextjs.org/docs/api-reference/next.config.js/introduction)
└── tailwind.config.js — Main configuration file for Tailwind CSS [Read more about it here](https://tailwindcss.com/docs/configuration)

Component Folder Structure

Each component includes

  1. Main TypeScript File
  2. Index File

Each component optionally may include

  1. Folder with images and icons
  2. Folder with data

Also, each component may include another component that follows all above listed rules.

Example structure

component
├── nested-component
│  ├── data
│  │  └── nested-component-lottie-data.json
│  ├── images
│  │  ├── nested-component-image.jpg
│  │  ├── nested-component-inline-svg.inline.svg
│  │  └── nested-component-url-svg.url.svg
│  ├── nested-component.tsx
│  └── index.ts
├── data
│  └── component-lottie-data.json
├── images
│  ├── component-image.jpg
│  ├── component-inline-svg.inline.svg
│  └── component-url-svg.url.svg
├── component.tsx
└── index.ts

Code Style

ESLint

ESLint helps find and fix code style issues and force developers to follow same rules. Current configuration is based on eslint:recommended, next/core-web-vitals and @typescript-eslint/recommended rules sets.

Additional commands:

npm run lint

Run it to check the current status of eslint issues across project.

npm run lint:fix

Run it to fix all possible issues.

Prettier

Prettier helps to format code based on defined rules. Difference between Prettier and ESLint.

Additional commands:

npm run format

Run it to format all files across the project.

VS Code

Following extensions required to simplify the process of keeping the same code style across the project:

After installation, VS Code will be use settings from the .vscode/settings.json file and will be fixing and formatting your code automatically on paste and save actions.

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • TypeScript 94.2%
  • JavaScript 3.8%
  • CSS 2.0%