4466ba436b
## Description This PR ensures that the default prettier config is used for examples and templates. This config is compatible with `prettier@3` as well (upgrading prettier is bigger change that can be a future PR). ## Changes - Updated `.prettierrc.json` in root with `"trailingComma": "es5"` (will be needed upgrading to prettier@3) - Added `examples/.prettierrc.json` with default config (this will change every example) - Added `packages/create-next-app/templates/.prettierrc.json` with default config (this will change every template) ## Related - Fixes #54402 - Closes #54409 |
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components | ||
pages | ||
.gitignore | ||
next-env.d.ts | ||
package.json | ||
README.md | ||
tsconfig.json |
Absolute Imports and Aliases
This example shows how to configure Absolute imports and Module path aliases in tsconfig.json
(or jsconfig.json
for JavaScript projects). These options will allow absolute imports from .
(the root directory), and allow you to create custom import aliases.
If you’re working on a large project, your relative import statements might suffer from ../../../
spaghetti:
import Button from "../../../components/button";
In such cases, we might want to setup absolute imports using the baseUrl
option, for clearer and shorter imports:
import Button from "components/button";
Furthermore, TypeScript also supports the paths
option, which allows you to configure custom module aliases. You can then use your alias like so:
import Button from "@/components/button";
Deploy your own
Deploy the example using Vercel or preview live with StackBlitz
How to use
Execute create-next-app
with npm, Yarn, or pnpm to bootstrap the example:
npx create-next-app --example with-absolute-imports with-absolute-imports-app
yarn create next-app --example with-absolute-imports with-absolute-imports-app
pnpm create next-app --example with-absolute-imports with-absolute-imports-app
Deploy it to the cloud with Vercel (Documentation).