A curated list of awesome books, videos, articles, boilerplates, and tools for the Next.js React framework.
Awesome Next.js is a curated, community-maintained list of resources for the Next.js React framework. It aggregates books, articles, videos, boilerplates, extensions, and example applications to help developers learn and build with Next.js efficiently. The project solves the problem of information overload by filtering and organizing the best available tools and educational content.
React developers, full-stack engineers, and teams adopting or already using Next.js who want to discover best practices, production-ready starters, and advanced techniques. It's especially valuable for those looking to accelerate project setup and stay updated with the ecosystem.
Developers choose Awesome Next.js because it provides a single, trusted source for high-quality Next.js resources, saving hours of research. Its community-driven curation ensures relevance and quality, and its wide coverage—from beginner tutorials to advanced boilerplates—makes it useful for all skill levels.
:notebook_with_decorative_cover: :books: A curated list of awesome resources : books, videos, articles about using Next.js (A minimalistic framework for universal server-rendered React applications)
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Aggregates high-quality books, articles, videos, and boilerplates in one place, as shown in sections like 'Essentials' and 'Boilerplates', saving developers hours of research.
Maintained by the community with contributions, ensuring relevance and filtering out noise, evidenced by the 'Contributing' section and regular updates.
Includes resources from beginner projects like video tutorials for Netflix clones to advanced boilerplates with TypeScript and authentication, catering to all developers.
Showcases example applications such as DevToolKit and Taskade, providing practical insights and cloning opportunities for learning.
Curated lists can lag behind rapid ecosystem changes; some README entries like older articles or boilerplates might be outdated or have broken links.
No built-in vetting or rating system for resources, so users must manually sift through varying quality, as admitted in the community-driven approach.
The extensive list of boilerplates and extensions, such as dozens in the 'Boilerplates' section, can paralyze beginners without guidance on selection.