starter-gatsby-blog
eslint-react-quick-setup
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starter-gatsby-blog | eslint-react-quick-setup | |
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4 | 1 | |
191 | 0 | |
1.0% | - | |
4.6 | 3.2 | |
17 days ago | 9 months ago | |
JavaScript | ||
MIT License | - |
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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
eslint-react-quick-setup
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Setup a modern Jamstack project using Gatsby, TypeScript, Styled Components, and Contentful!
Answer the questions how you like, but make sure that whichever answers you choose, you make sure to pick the same ones each time you set up ESLint. This way, you can save any custom rules in a separate repo, like I've done here, and copy and paste them in. Now, your code will be consistent across all your projects.
What are some alternatives?
gatsby-contentful-blog - [Moved to: https://github.com/andrews1022/contentful-blog-gatsby-starter]
gatsby-starter-contentful-homepage
gatsby-starter-wordpress-homepage
demo-gatsby-contentful
gatsby-starter-drupal-homepage
TypeScript - TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.
contentful-remix-starter-blog - Remix starter for a Contentful blog (template) project
jamstack.org - The official Jamstack site
styled-components - Visual primitives for the component age. Use the best bits of ES6 and CSS to style your apps without stress 💅
Gatsby - The best React-based framework with performance, scalability and security built in.
gatsby-starter-mate - An accessible and fast portfolio starter for Gatsby integrated with Contentful CMS