rsnext/packages/create-next-app/README.md
Colin McDonnell 7e16538485
Include instructions for bun package manager (#53590)
## For Contributors

### Improving Documentation

- [x] Run `pnpm prettier-fix` to fix formatting issues before opening the PR.
- [x] Read the Docs Contribution Guide to ensure your contribution follows the docs guidelines: https://nextjs.org/docs/community/contribution-guide

### What?

Add instructions for using `bun/bunx` where relevant. I only added mentions where npm/yarn/pnpm were all already listed. 

### Why

Bun can be used as a runtime-agnostic [package manager](https://bun.sh/package-manager) and script runner in any project with a `package.json`.

(Sorry, I probably should have consolidated this with https://github.com/vercel/next.js/pull/53467)

Co-authored-by: Steven <229881+styfle@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-08-10 23:44:20 +00:00

3 KiB

Create Next App

The easiest way to get started with Next.js is by using create-next-app. This CLI tool enables you to quickly start building a new Next.js application, with everything set up for you. You can create a new app using the default Next.js template, or by using one of the official Next.js examples. To get started, use the following command:

Interactive

You can create a new project interactively by running:

npx create-next-app@latest
# or
yarn create next-app
# or
pnpm create next-app
# or
bunx create-next-app

You will be asked for the name of your project, and then whether you want to create a TypeScript project:

✔ Would you like to use TypeScript? … No / Yes

Select Yes to install the necessary types/dependencies and create a new TS project.

Non-interactive

You can also pass command line arguments to set up a new project non-interactively. See create-next-app --help:

create-next-app <project-directory> [options]

Options:
  -V, --version                      output the version number
  --ts, --typescript

    Initialize as a TypeScript project. (default)

  --js, --javascript

    Initialize as a JavaScript project.

  --use-npm

    Explicitly tell the CLI to bootstrap the app using npm

  --use-pnpm

    Explicitly tell the CLI to bootstrap the app using pnpm

  --use-yarn

    Explicitly tell the CLI to bootstrap the app using Yarn

  --use-bun

    Explicitly tell the CLI to bootstrap the app using Bun

  -e, --example [name]|[github-url]

    An example to bootstrap the app with. You can use an example name
    from the official Next.js repo or a GitHub URL. The URL can use
    any branch and/or subdirectory

  --example-path <path-to-example>

    In a rare case, your GitHub URL might contain a branch name with
    a slash (e.g. bug/fix-1) and the path to the example (e.g. foo/bar).
    In this case, you must specify the path to the example separately:
    --example-path foo/bar

Why use Create Next App?

create-next-app allows you to create a new Next.js app within seconds. It is officially maintained by the creators of Next.js, and includes a number of benefits:

  • Interactive Experience: Running npx create-next-app@latest (with no arguments) launches an interactive experience that guides you through setting up a project.
  • Zero Dependencies: Initializing a project is as quick as one second. Create Next App has zero dependencies.
  • Offline Support: Create Next App will automatically detect if you're offline and bootstrap your project using your local package cache.
  • Support for Examples: Create Next App can bootstrap your application using an example from the Next.js examples collection (e.g. npx create-next-app --example api-routes).
  • Tested: The package is part of the Next.js monorepo and tested using the same integration test suite as Next.js itself, ensuring it works as expected with every release.