Introduction to Devii
Devii is a starter kit for building your personal developer website. Powered by the best technologies 2020 has to offer.
It's not a a framework or a library, it's a just a simple project that contains some useful utilities and patterns that'll help you hit the ground running. In fact, the GitHub repo for Devii contains the code for the site you're currently reading!
Devii doesn't try to be a fully functional blog out of the box. After cloning/forking the repo, you'll need to delete the contents of index.tsx
(the page you're reading now!) and implement your own homepage. Devii makes it easier — for instance, you can access a list of all your blog posts in props.posts
— but you still have to build the site you're imagining in your mind's eye.
And that's the point! After you clone/fork it, look through this code to learn how Devii works. Then rip out what you don't like, customize everything else, and build your own tools and components on top of the foundation Devii provides!
Devii was designed to place zero restrictions on what your site can be or become. You can use any React component or styling library, pull in data from third-party APIs, even implement user accounts. Your personal website is the online manifestation of you. Don't compromise.
Features
It may not look like much, but Devii does a lot out of the box.
Markdown loading and rendering: Using Next.js dynamic imports, you can load Markdown files and pass them into your Next.js pages as props. Easy peasy.
TypeScript + React: Markdown is great for text-heavy, non-interactive content. For everything else, you'll want something a little more expressive. Devii makes it easy to mix Markdown and React on the same page. Just load your Markdown files with dynamic imports, pass it into your component as a prop, and render it with the Markdown.tsx
component.
Built-in support for blogs: Devii provides a utility for parsing Markdown blog posts with frontmatter metadata into a structured TypeScript object. Supported tags include: title
, subtitle
, datePublished
, tags
, description
, canonicalUrl
, author
, authorPhoto
, authorTwitter
, bannerPhoto
, and thumbnailPhoto
Medium-inspired styles: The Markdown components (Markdown.tsx
) contains default styles inspired by Medium.
Google Analytics: Just add your Google Analytics ID (e.g. 'UA-999999999-1') to globals.ts
and the appropriate snippet will be automatically added to every page.
RSS feed generation: An RSS feed is auto-generated from your blog post feed.
SEO best practices: Every blog post page automatically populated meta tags based on the post metadata. This includes a title
tag, meta
tags, og:
tags, Twitter metadata, and a link
tag containing the canonical URL.
GitHub-style code blocks: with syntax highlighting powered by react-syntax-highlighter. Works out-of-the-box for all programming languages. Just use Markdown's triple backtick syntax with a "language identifier", just like GitHub.
Static generation: you can generate a fully static version of your site using yarn build && yarn export
. Powered by Next.js.
Zero magic: You can view and modify every aspect of the site. If you're looking for a starting point, start modifying index.tsx
(the home page), BlogPost.tsx
(the blog post template), and Markdown.tsx
(the Markdown component). And of course you can add entirely new pages/components as well!
My blog posts
This section demonstrates the power of dynamic imports. Every Markdown file under /md/blog
is automatically parsed into a structured TypeScript object and available in the props.posts
array. These blog post "cards" are implemented in the/components/PostCard.tsx
component.
Testimonials
Seems like it might be useful!
— Dan Abramov, taken utterly out of context