9f9214abe5
This PR updates the docs and examples for `create-next-app` to include pnpm usage. The following script was used to update every example README: ```js const fs = require('fs') const examples = fs.readdirSync('./examples') for (let example of examples) { const filename = `./examples/${example}/README.md` const markdown = fs.readFileSync(filename, 'utf8') const regex = new RegExp(`^yarn create next-app --example (.*)$`, 'gm') const output = markdown.replace(regex, (yarn, group) => { const pnpm = `pnpm create next-app -- --example ${group}` return `${yarn}\n# or\n${pnpm}` }) fs.writeFileSync(filename, output) } ``` |
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.. | ||
pages | ||
.gitignore | ||
package.json | ||
README.md |
Hello World example
This example shows the most basic idea behind Next. We have 2 pages: pages/index.js
and pages/about.js
. The former responds to /
requests and the latter to /about
. Using next/link
you can add hyperlinks between them with universal routing capabilities. The day
directory shows that you can have subdirectories.
Deploy your own
Deploy the example using Vercel or preview live with StackBlitz
How to use
Execute create-next-app
with npm or Yarn to bootstrap the example:
npx create-next-app --example hello-world hello-world-app
# or
yarn create next-app --example hello-world hello-world-app
# or
pnpm create next-app -- --example hello-world hello-world-app
Deploy it to the cloud with Vercel (Documentation).