This is a bare bones starter project that shows the usage of Next.js with TypeScript.
Deploy the example using Vercel:
Execute
create-next-app
with npm or
Yarn to bootstrap the example:
npx create-next-app --example with-typescript with-typescript-app
# or
yarn create next-app --example with-typescript with-typescript-app
Download the example:
curl https://codeload.github.com/vercel/next.js/tar.gz/canary | tar -xz --strip=2 next.js-canary/examples/with-typescript
cd with-typescript
Install it and run:
npm install
npm run dev
# or
yarn
yarn dev
Deploy it to the cloud with Vercel (Documentation).
This example shows how to integrate the TypeScript type system into Next.js. Since TypeScript is supported out of the box with Next.js, all we have to do is to install TypeScript.
npm install --save-dev typescript
To enable TypeScript's features, we install the type declarations for React and Node.
npm install --save-dev @types/react @types/react-dom @types/node
When we run next dev
the next time, Next.js will start looking for any .ts
or .tsx
files in our project and builds it. It even automatically creates a
tsconfig.json
file for our project with the recommended settings.
Next.js has built-in TypeScript declarations, so we'll get autocompletion for Next.js' modules straight away.
A type-check
script is also added to package.json
, which runs TypeScript's
tsc
CLI in noEmit
mode to run type-checking separately. You can then include
this, for example, in your test
scripts.