gatsby-starter-medusa
medusa-server-wishlist | gatsby-starter-medusa | |
---|---|---|
1 | 12 | |
0 | 81 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 2.1 | |
over 1 year ago | about 1 year ago | |
TypeScript | JavaScript | |
- | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
medusa-server-wishlist
-
Customize Medusa and Gatsby to Implement Wishlist Functionality
You can find the final code for this tutorial in this GitHub repository for the Medusa server and this one for the Gatsby storefront.
gatsby-starter-medusa
-
Adding medusa storefronts
gatsby new medusa-gatsby https://github.com/medusajs/gatsby-starter-medusa
-
Customize Medusa and Gatsby to Implement Wishlist Functionality
This tutorial uses the Gatsby starter to test the wishlist functionality added to the Medusa server. However, you can still follow along using a different storefront framework.
-
We Released a New Next.js Ecommerce Storefront with Ready Integrations to PayPal, MeiliSearch, Stripe, and more!
Last month, our team at Medusa built a new advanced Next.js storefront that can be used with a Medusa server. If interested in other Medusa starters, feel free to check out Medusa.Express or our Gatsby starter.
-
How I Integrated Live Chat into Gatsby with Tidio and Medusa
In this tutorial, you’ll learn how to add live-chat functionality to your ecommerce store using Medusa, Tidio live chat, and Gatsby Storefront.
-
A Guide for Beginners into Medusa, the Open Source Ecommerce Platform
Medusa provides two starter storefronts, one built using Next.js and one using Gatsby. You can also build your own storefront by interacting with the REST APIs.
-
Medusa storefront with multiple vendors
The difficult part is for the modification of store frontend. I use Medusa Gatsby Starter to my store frontend. However, there are many incompatible with my above modification of backend.
-
How to Use a Monorepo to Deploy Your Gatsby Ecommerce Storefront and Admin
git clone https://github.com/medusajs/gatsby-starter-medusa.git storefront
-
Create An Open Source Ecommerce Store with Gatsby and Medusa
This creates a Gatsby website using the already-existing Medusa Gatsby starter.
-
Turn a Shopify backend open-source and headless in less than 10 minutes
It gives you full flexibility to build any type of frontend(s) you may prefer - Medusa has starters in Next.js or Gatsby to set up a high-performing storefront out-of-the-box so you have a good starting point before starting to customize it to your needs. You can check out a demo of the starer here.
-
Open-source Node.js commerce engine for Strapi
GatsbyJS (much more feature-rich V2 coming soon)
What are some alternatives?
Medusa - Building blocks for digital commerce
medusa-gatsby-wishlist
Redis - Redis is an in-memory database that persists on disk. The data model is key-value, but many different kind of values are supported: Strings, Lists, Sets, Sorted Sets, Hashes, Streams, HyperLogLogs, Bitmaps.
Newman - Newman is a command-line collection runner for Postman
nextjs-starter-medusa - A performant frontend ecommerce starter template with Next.js 14 and Medusa.
admin - Admin system for Medusa Stores
Strapi - 🚀 Strapi is the leading open-source headless CMS. It’s 100% JavaScript/TypeScript, fully customizable and developer-first.
Next.js - The React Framework
Gatsby - The best React-based framework with performance, scalability and security built in.
strapi-medusa-template
PostgreSQL - Mirror of the official PostgreSQL GIT repository. Note that this is just a *mirror* - we don't work with pull requests on github. To contribute, please see https://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Submitting_a_Patch