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Real-World Next.js

You're reading from   Real-World Next.js Build scalable, high-performance, and modern web applications using Next.js, the React framework for production

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801073493
Length 366 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Michele Riva Michele Riva
Author Profile Icon Michele Riva
Michele Riva
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Introduction to Next.js
2. Chapter 1: A Brief Introduction to Next.js FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Exploring Different Rendering Strategies 4. Chapter 3: Next.js Basics and Built-In Components 5. Part 2: Hands-On Next.js
6. Chapter 4: Organizing the Code Base and Fetching Data in Next.js 7. Chapter 5: Managing Local and Global States in Next.js 8. Chapter 6: CSS and Built-In Styling Methods 9. Chapter 7: Using UI Frameworks 10. Chapter 8: Using a Custom Server 11. Chapter 9: Testing Next.js 12. Chapter 10: Working with SEO and Managing Performance 13. Chapter 11: Different Deployment Platforms 14. Part 3: Next.js by Example
15. Chapter 12: Managing Authentication and User Sessions 16. Chapter 13: Building an E-Commerce Website with Next.js and GraphCMS 17. Chapter 14: Example Projects and Next Steps for Learning More 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Data fetching

As seen in the previous chapters, Next.js allows us to fetch data on both the client and server sides. Server-side data fetching could happen in two different moments: at build time (using getStaticProps for static pages), and at runtime (using getServerSideProps for server-side rendered pages).

Data can come from several resources: databases, search engines, external APIs, filesystems, and many other sources. Even if it's technically possible for Next.js to access a database and query for specific data, I'd personally discourage that approach as Next.js should only care about the frontend of our application.

Let's take an example: we're building a blog, and we want to display an author page showing their name, job title, and biography. In that example, the data is stored in a MySQL database, and we could easily access it using any MySQL client for Node.js.

Even though accessing that data from Next.js can be relatively easy, it would make...

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