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Jumpstart Jamstack Development

You're reading from   Jumpstart Jamstack Development Build and deploy modern websites and web apps using Gatsby, Netlify, and Sanity

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800203495
Length 252 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Christopher Pecoraro Christopher Pecoraro
Author Profile Icon Christopher Pecoraro
Christopher Pecoraro
Vincenzo Gambino Vincenzo Gambino
Author Profile Icon Vincenzo Gambino
Vincenzo Gambino
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: History of the Jamstack 2. Chapter 2: Introduction to Sanity FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Exploring Sanity Studio 4. Chapter 4: Sanity Configuration and Schemas 5. Chapter 5: Sanity's GROQ Language 6. Chapter 6: Sanity's GraphQL Playground 7. Chapter 7: Gatsby – An Introduction 8. Chapter 8: Gatsby and GraphQL 9. Chapter 9: Gatsby Source Plugins 10. Chapter 10: Building Gatsby Components 11. Chapter 11: APIs – Extending Gatsby 12. Chapter 12: APIs – Alexa Skills 13. Chapter 13: Tying It All Together 14. Chapter 14: Deployment Using Netlify and Azure 15. Chapter 15: Conclusion 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

React components

Gatsby uses React underneath, so it can take advantage of all that React has to offer. A React component is mostly a JavaScript function that returns something. By leveraging GraphQL, the developer can use Gatsby's source plugin to pass data into the page. Properties are usually sent into the component and then events are passed up. These patterns – props down, events up or data down, and actions up, are used in several JavaScript frameworks and are very easy to understand. Once a React component is created, it may be imported to another component for easy reuse.

Tag convention

As mentioned in the previous section, once a component is created, it can be invoked or used in Gatsby as if it was its own HTML tag, so its use is familiar to those who are familiar with working with HTML tags. This is useful for readability, since the output looks like HTML and not JavaScript code. The convention for working with React components is to encapsulate the name...

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