Creating a Markdown Blog with Next.js

February 18, 2022

By Kendall Strautman & James Perkins

Tina + Next Part I

02.08.22: This post has been updated to use Next 12 and it’s latest features.

Want to skip to using Tina with Next.js? Jump to of this series.

Next.js is a React “metaframework” (a framework built on a framework) for developing web applications. Next.js has become a popular choice for web developers due to its bootstrapped React environment (similar to create-react-app) and its simple, file-based routing for writing backend code.

Next.js is simple and flexible. Compared to a full-fledged static site generator, there are less prescriptive guide rails placed on developers in the implementation of an app or site. Due to this flexibility, this article shares just one perspective to approach building a simple, Markdown-based blog. Take what’s helpful, disregard the rest.

If you’d like to skip ahead and reference final versions of the starter, feel free to checkout the finished implementation.

Clone the starter

Let’s get started. I have provided a bare bones starter to use as a starting point for this tutorial. You can clone the project or check it out on github for reference.

// clone the repo from your terminal

$ git clone https

:

/

/

github

.

com

/

perkinsjr

/

nextjs

-

starter

-

boilerplate my

-

nextjs

-

blog

// install the dependencies

$ cd my

-

nextjs

-

blog $ yarn install

// start up the dev server

$ yarn dev

After you clone the project and start the dev server, navigate to http://localhost:3000/ in your browser to see what you’re working with.

As you can see, it’s pretty simple at the moment. If you look at the project in your code editor, you will see the following directory structure:

components

/

data

/

pages

/

styles

/

Project Structure

Let’s look at the pages/index.js file:

const

Index

=

props

=>

{

return

(

<

Layout

pathname

=

"

/

"

siteTitle

=

{

props

.

title

}

siteDescription

=

{

props

.

description

}

>

<

section

>

<

BlogList

/>

</

section

>

</

Layout

>

)

}

export

default

Index

export

async

function

getStaticProps

(

)

{

const

configData

=

await

import

(

`

../data/config.json

`

)

return

{

props

:

{

title

:

configData

.

title

,

description

:

configData

.

description

,

}

,

}

}

You’ll see that you now have a Layout component wrapping a <section> with a BlogList component — these are all the pieces that render our little starter so far.

Data Handling

Next.js pre-renders every page, meaning it generates HTML for pages in advance. As of Next.js 9.3, there are two ways to pre-render pages: static generation or server-side-rendering (SSR). Next.js is unique in that you can use either approach depending on the project.

For this blog, you will implement static generation, this means HTML pages for each route will be generated at build time. Static generation allows pages to be cached by a CDN, improving performance.

getStaticProps

In the initial exampleindex.js, notice the use of getStaticProps below the component. This function allows you to fetch data and return it as props to your page component. The page will be rendered at build time with the props from the return object in getStaticProps.

This is your bread and butter for retrieving page-level data in Next. You can use getStaticProps to fetch data from an external api, or as seen in this example, you can get a hold of local data sources.

Note: this method only works for components defined in the pages/ directory, i.e., page components. You cannot use this method on child components, but you can pass down the data received to these child components, as you see being done with Layout in the example above.

Layout is being passed props such as the site title and description. If you look at the data in data/config.json, you’ll see the values these props are referencing. Go ahead and change the site title to your project name, then watch it update in the header.

Layout & Styling

To zoom out a little, the purpose of the Layout component is to provide the visual skeleton for every page of the site. It typically will contain some sort of nav or header that shows up on most or all pages, along with a footer element. In your case you just have a header that contains the site title.

Within Layout, there is a Meta component that contains all global styles along with anything needed to be put in the head of the site for SEO or accessibility purposes. Note that the use of a Layout component isn’t unique to Next.js; you’ll see it commonly used in Gatsby sites as well.

One thing you may notice in the Layout component is the use of component level CSS. Next.js works out of the box with component level css. It’s super intuitive to use. All of the styles are scoped to the component, this means you don’t have to worry about accidentally overriding a style somewhere else.

Note that global styles and fonts are handled in the globals.css found in the styles directory, so if you want to change fonts, or add more global styles you can add it here.

Adding the Posts Directory

Now that you’re familiar with the structure of the project and Next.js fundamentals, let’s start adding the pieces and parts to get the Markdown blog up and running.

First, add a new folder in the root of your project called posts. You can add all your Markdown blog posts here. If you don’t already have content ready, just add a few dummy blog posts. I like to use Unsplash for sample photos and Cupcake, Hipsum, or Sagan Ipsum are my preferred text generators — keeps things interesting.

Here’s an example filler blog post with some commonly used frontmatter values.

--

-

title

:

A

trip to

Iceland

author

:

'Watson & Crick '

date

:

'2019-07-10T16:04:44.000Z'

hero_image

:

/

norris

-

niman

-

iceland

.

jpg

--

-

Brain

is the seed

of

intelligence something incredible is waiting to be known

.

Also, create a public folder in the root. This is where you will keep images.

Processing Markdown Files

Next, you need to install a few packages that will process your Markdown files.

$ yarn add raw

-

loader gray

-

matter react

-

markdown

Raw Loader will process your Markdown files. Gray Matter will parse your yaml frontmatter values. And React Markdown will parse and render the body of your Markdown files.

Add Next.js Config

Now that you’ve installed some packages needed to handle Markdown, you need to configure the use of the raw-loader by creating a next.config.js file at the root of the project. In this file you will handle any custom configuration for webpack, routing, build & runtime config, export options, and a whole lot more. In your use case, you will simply be adding a webpack rule to use raw-loader for processing all Markdown files.

//next.config.js

module

.

exports

=

{

webpack

:

function

(

config

)

{

config

.

module

.

rules

.

push

(

{

test

:

/\.md$/

,

use

:

'raw-loader'

,

}

)

return

config

}

,

}

Pages & Dynamic Routing

So you’re set up to use Markdown files in your project. Let’s start coding a blog template page that will render the content from these Markdown files in posts.

For some background knowledge, the pages directory is special in Next.js. Each .js file in this directory will respond to a matching HTTP request. For example, when the home page (‘/’) is requested, the component exported from pages/index.js will be rendered. If you want your site to have a page at /about, simply create a file named pages/about.js.

This is awesome for static pages, but you’d like to have a single template from which all blog posts will be built, sourcing the different data from each Markdown file. This means you need some sort of dynamic routing, such that unique blog posts utilizing the same template have ‘pretty’ urls and their own individual pages.

Dynamic routes in Next.js are identified by square brackets [] in the filename. Within these brackets you can pass a query parameter to the page component. For example, let’s create a new folder within pages called blog, then add a new file within that blog folder [slug].js, you can use whatever is passed as this slug parameter to dynamically access data. So if you visit http://localhost:3000/blog/julius-caesar, whatever is returned from the [slug].js page component will render, and will have access to that ‘slug’ query parameter, i.e. ‘julius-caesar’.

Get Markdown Data For the Blog Template

With dynamic routing, you can make use of this slug parameter by passing in the filename of the blog post and then getting the data from the corresponding Markdown file via getStaticProps.

import

matter

from

'gray-matter'

import

ReactMarkdown

from

'react-markdown'

import

Layout

from

'../../components/Layout'

export

default

function

BlogTemplate

(

props

)

{

// Render data from `getStaticProps`

return

(

<

Layout

siteTitle

=

{

props

.

siteTitle

}

>

<

article

>

<

h1

>

{

props

.

frontmatter

.

title

}

</

h1

>

<

div

>

<

ReactMarkdown

source

=

{

props

.

markdownBody

}

/>

</

div

>

</

article

>

</

Layout

>

)

}

export

async

function

getStaticProps

(

{

...

ctx

}

)

{

const

{

slug

}

=

ctx

.

params

const

content

=

await

import

(

`

../../posts/

${

slug

}

.md

`

)

const

config

=

await

import

(

`

../../data/config.json

`

)

const

data

=

matter

(

content

.

default

)

return

{

props

:

{

siteTitle

:

config

.

title

,

frontmatter

:

data

.

data

,

markdownBody

:

data

.

content

,

}

,

}

}

export

async

function

getStaticPaths

(

)

{

//get all .md files in the posts dir

const

blogs

=

glob

.

sync

(

'posts/**/*.md'

)

//remove path and extension to leave filename only

const

blogSlugs

=

blogs

.

map

(

file

=>

file

.

split

(

'/'

)

[

1

]

.

replace

(

/ /g

,

'-'

)

.

slice

(

0

,

-

3

)

.

trim

(

)

)

// create paths with `slug` param

const

paths

=

blogSlugs

.

map

(

slug

=>

`

/blog/

${

slug

}

`

)

return

{

paths

,

fallback

:

false

,

}

}

Notice in this example that we’re making use of gray-matter and ReactMarkdown to properly handle the YAML frontmatter and Markdown body.

A zoomed out look at how this is working: when you navigate to a dynamic route, .e.g. http://localhost:3000/blog/julius-caesar, the BlogTemplate component in pages/blog/[slug].js is passed the params object { slug: ‘julius-caesar’ }. When the getStaticProps function is called, that params object is passed in through the context. You get a hold of that slug value and then go search for a file within the posts directory that contains the same filename. Once you get the data from that file, you parse the frontmatter from the Markdown body and return the data. That data is passed down as props to the BlogTemplate component which can then render that data as it needs.

getStaticPaths

At this point, you may be more familiar with getStaticProps, but this function should look new — getStaticPaths. Since this template uses dynamic routes, you need to define a list of paths for each blog, so all the pages will be rendered statically at build time.

In the return object from getStaticPaths, two keys are required: paths and fallback. paths should return an array of pathnames and any params used in the page name. For example the ‘param’ used in /blog/[slug].js is ‘slug’. You should only need to use getStaticPaths for dynamic routing.

The fallback property allows you to control the behavior if a path is not returned from getStaticPaths. You should set this to false so that unreturned paths will show a 404 page.

Before the release of Next.js 9.3, this path generation for static export could be handled via exportPathMap.

Checkout the [slug].js file in the final version of my starter blog to get another idea of how that blog data could be rendered and styles applied.

Get Data For the Blog Index

Let’s finish this simple blog off by adding in the proper data to the BlogList component for the Index page. Since you can only use getStaticProps on page components, you will get a hold of all the blog data in the Index component and then pass it down as a prop for BlogList to render.

// pages/index.js

export

async

function

getStaticProps

(

)

{

const

siteConfig

=

await

import

(

`

../data/config.json

`

)

//get posts & context from folder

const

posts

=

(

context

=>

{

const

keys

=

context

.

keys

(

)

const

values

=

keys

.

map

(

context

)

const

data

=

keys

.

map

(

(

key

,

index

)

=>

{

// Create slug from filename

const

slug

=

key

.

replace

(

/^.*[\\\/]/

,

''

)

.

split

(

'.'

)

.

slice

(

0

,

-

1

)

.

join

(

'.'

)

const

value

=

values

[

index

]

// Parse yaml metadata & markdownbody in document

const

document

=

matter

(

value

.

default

)

return

{

frontmatter

:

document

.

data

,

markdownBody

:

document

.

content

,

slug

,

}

}

)

return

data

}

)

(

require

.

context

(

'../posts'

,

true

,

/\.md$/

)

)

return

{

props

:

{

allBlogs

:

posts

,

title

:

siteConfig

.

default

.

title

,

description

:

siteConfig

.

default

.

description

,

}

,

}

}

This can be slightly complex to look at, but let’s take it one step at a time. Feel free to reference this blog for the original code. It uses a function provided by Webpack, require.context(), that allows you to create your own ‘context’ based on three parameters:

  • The directory to match within.

  • A boolean flag to include or exclude subdirectories.

  • A regular expression to match files against.

require

.

context

(

directory

,

(

useSubdirectories

=

false

)

,

(

regExp

=

/^\.\//

)

)

Creating a ‘context’ allows us to create a space where you can pick out all the files matching a regular expression from a particular directory, and manipulate them into manageable formats that are provided back to the component as props to be rendered.

Now that you have all of the blog data, pass it as a prop to the BlogList component.

const

Index

=

props

=>

{

return

(

<

Layout

pathname

=

"

/

"

siteTitle

=

{

props

.

title

}

siteDescription

=

{

props

.

description

}

>

<

section

>

<

BlogList

allBlogs

=

{

props

.

allBlogs

}

/>

</

section

>

</

Layout

>

)

}

export

default

Index

Then you are free to loop through the blogs and render the list within your BlogList component as you need. Feel free to check out the BlogList component in my starter to see how that data could be handled.

Next Steps

Checkout the final repo!

After setting up your blog or portfolio site, you’ll most likely need a content management system to make editing and updating your posts or data easier. Stay tuned for my next blog on setting up this starter with TinaCMS. In the meantime, you can check out our documentation , or fork the finished Next+Tina blog to start playing with TinaCMS right away.

Where can you keep up to date with Tina?

You know that you want to be part of this creative, innovative, supportive community of developers (and even some editors and designers) who are experimenting and implementing Tina daily.

Tina Community Discord

Tina has a community Discord that is full of Jamstack lovers and Tina enthusiasts. When you join you will find a place:

  • To get help with issues

  • Find the latest Tina news and sneak previews

  • Share your project with Tina community, and talk about your experience

  • Chat about the Jamstack

Tina Twitter

Our Twitter account (@tina_cms) announces the latest features, improvements, and sneak peeks to Tina. We would also be psyched if you tagged us in projects you have built.

Last Edited: February 18, 2022