starter-gatsby-blog
contentful-remix-starter-blog
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starter-gatsby-blog | contentful-remix-starter-blog | |
---|---|---|
4 | 1 | |
191 | 18 | |
0.5% | - | |
4.6 | 7.4 | |
about 1 month ago | 7 days ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
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.
starter-gatsby-blog
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Developer Showcase Spotlight: Low-code examples of building blogs
So, my first port of call was the official GitHub repository where Contentful maintains a starter blog template built using Gatsby, which has push button deployment for Gatsby Cloud. This template is basic but properly formatted with all the necessary features of a functional blog. Things like an index page, formatting for individual posts and key visuals, plus timestamps, authors, and tagging.
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An Unnecessarily Extensive Comparison of Gatsby & Next.js (While Rebuilding My Portfolio)
Now to be fair to both, if you use the starter-gatsby-blog from Contentful themselves, the new gatsby-starter-contentful-homepage from Gatsby, or the Next.js Contentful example, these do use environment variables. It's just these basic starters that do not.
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The New Gatsby Homepage Starters - Less Is More
Ultimately, I think there is too much content being created at the start here. There is, I think, a pretty decent chance you will end scrapping a decent portion of these models and content. Or, you will have to spend a lot of time restructuring/renaming it to meet your project's needs, which is not ideal. On the other hand, the existing contentful/starter-gatsby-blog I think has too little content. Therefore, I think there needs to be a nice middle ground with the quantity of content being generated out of the box.
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Setup a modern Jamstack project using Gatsby, TypeScript, Styled Components, and Contentful!
npx gatsby new . https://github.com/contentful/starter-gatsby-blog
contentful-remix-starter-blog
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Developer Showcase Spotlight: Low-code examples of building blogs
At first glance, this third blog looks exactly the same as the Gatsby Starter Blog. It’s actually a fork and rebuilt from the ground up using the RemixJS framework. For this site, I opted to host it again on Vercel.
What are some alternatives?
gatsby-contentful-blog - [Moved to: https://github.com/andrews1022/contentful-blog-gatsby-starter]
vercel - Develop. Preview. Ship.
gatsby-starter-wordpress-homepage
gatsby-starter-mate - An accessible and fast portfolio starter for Gatsby integrated with Contentful CMS
gatsby-starter-contentful-homepage
Next.js - The React Framework
demo-gatsby-contentful
Next-JS-Landing-Page-Starter-Template - 🚀 Free NextJS Landing Page Template written in Tailwind CSS 3 and TypeScript ⚡️ Made with developer experience first: Next.js 14 + TypeScript + ESLint + Prettier + Husky + Lint-Staged + VSCode + Netlify + PostCSS + Tailwind CSS
jamstack.org - The official Jamstack site
eslint-plugin-react - React-specific linting rules for ESLint
Gatsby - The best React-based framework with performance, scalability and security built in.