An organised 11ty boilerplate to get you up and running fast. Features TypeScript, native JSX support via Preact, CSS Modules with SASS, a well defined webpack config for great DX, and all pre-optimised for performance.
Demo: https://11tyby.netlify.app/
Getting setup with the necessary tooling to handle TypeScript, JSX, dynamic imports, SASS etc is time consuming. This project also has partial hydration to reduce the amount of code shipped to your users.
The project is structured via the module pattern, files are grouped via feature, e.g ./src/modules/home
. This allows you to better future proof your application as it grows, and localise code where it's needed. Your page *.11ty.tsx
files reside within their relevant feature folder, and export a permalink
property for you to define their url structure, e.g:
module.exports = {
render: Page,
data: () => ({
permalink: '/my-feature/index.html',
}),
};
11tyby comes pre-setup with support for CSS Modules and SASS. You have two options to import styles, globally or localised. To convert a SASS or CSS file into a CSS Module, you'll need to apply a .module
suffix to your file, e.g login.module.css
. You can then import this directly into a component:
import style from './login.module.scss';
/*[...]*/
function Login() {
return <form class={style.form}>/*[...]*/</form>;
}
To import styles globally, just add a non return import statement to the file you wish to load them from, e.g:
import './global.css';
/*[...]*/
To apply the generated style sheet to a page, you'll need to add a cssPath
property within the data object exported from your *.11ty.tsx
files, e.g:
function Page() {
return <main class={style.wrapper}>{/*[...]*/}</main>;
}
/*[...]*/
module.exports = {
render: Page,
data: () => ({
permalink: 'index.html',
cssPath: 'login/login.11ty.css', // <----
}),
};
The path will match the respective module folder, and the name will mirror that of your *.11ty.tsx
file name but with a CSS extension.
11tyby includes a package dedicated to applying partial hydration. This works as an HOC, wrapping the component you wish to hydrate on the client. You can apply this as follows:
import { define } from 'preactement';
/*[...]*/
function MainForm() {
return <form>/*[...]*/</form>;
}
/*[...]*/
const Form = define('main-form', () => MainForm);
/*[...]*/
export { Form };
It's recommended that you create components within their own folder, and apply this function in an index.ts
file within. That way you can seperate any "transforms" the component might need at runtime with the component itself, you can see an example here.
Once you have a hydrated component, you'll need to import it into an "Entry" file. These are suffixed with .entry
, and must be placed within their respective module folder, e.g ./src/home/home.entry.ts
.
The entry file needs to import your hydrated components, e.g:
import '@/modules/home/components/form';
This file is then referenced within your *.11ty.tsx
file by passing it into the data
object exported from your component, e.g:
/*[...]*/
function Page() {
return <main>{/*[...]*/}</main>;
}
/*[...]*/
module.exports = {
render: Page,
data: () => ({
permalink: 'index.html',
jsPath: 'home/home.entry.js', // <----
}),
};
For a working example, take a look at the home
module here.
All official 11ty methods to gather data from an API or otherwise, will work here. There are many great examples of how to do this in the official 11ty documentation, including the use of GraphQL: https://www.11ty.dev/docs/data-js/.
To define global data, add either JSON, JS or TypeScript files to the ./src/data
folder. These will then be parsed by 11ty and added via the data cascade. You can access these directly in your .11ty.ts*
files.
For example, if you were to add a global.ts
file to ./src/data
, you would access this via a global
property in your pages argument object:
interface IProps {
global: {
title: string;
};
}
/*[...]*/
function Page({ global }: IProps) {
return (
<main>
<h1>{global.title}</h1>
</main>
);
}
To add local data, e.g data specific to a module, add a file suffixed with .data
within the relevant module folder. This will then be accessible in exactly the same way as shown above, but only for that page. For example, if you added home.data.ts
to ./src/modules/home
, your home page 11ty.tsx
file would have access to the values held within that data file.
git clone git@github.com:jahilldev/11tyby.git
yarn
yarn start
yarn build