Divjoy

Create a Next.js app with Cloud Firestore and Tailwind

a dev guide by Divjoy ✨

About this guide

This development guide walks you through everything you need to do to build a high-quality Next.js app integrated with Cloud Firestore and Tailwind. Check out the tasks below to get started. To save time, you can also use our boilerplate, which gives you a complete React codebase with all of these tasks done for you. Okay, let's dive in!

Tasks

  • ⚛Setup your Next.js app

    Create a Next.js app using npx create-next-app and then run your project locally with the npm run dev command.
  • ⛅️Create Cloud Firestore query hooks

    Create React hooks that wrap your Cloud Firestore queries, such as useUser, useItem, and useItemsByUser. These hooks should subscribe to data using onSnapshot and return a query status of "success", "loading", or "error". The React Query library makes it especially easy to setup these hooks and have components re-render when data changes.
  • 👩‍🏫Add Firestore rules

    Be sure to specify your Firestore security rules so that your Firestore database is secure. For example, if you have a users collection you might ensure that the authenticated user can only update a doc if userDoc.uid matches their uid. If you have an items collection you might ensure that they can only update and fetch items where itemDoc.owner matches their uid. You'll also generally want to specify an array of fields that are writeable, as you wouldn't want a user to be able to change userDoc.planId without actually upgrading their plan.
  • ⚡Build a data-driven UI

    Create a data-driven UI using Tailwind elements that reads/writes data to Cloud Firestore. The specifics will depend on the type of app you're building, but we generally recommend having a useItemsByOwner hook that fetches "items" in Cloud Firestore that are owned by the current user. You can then create a component for displaying that data in a simple list or table if more columns are needed. Finally, you'll want create a flow for creating and updating items utilizing Tailwind modal and form components.
  • ⚙️Install and configure Tailwind

    Install Tailwind and add a tailwind.config.js file by following the Tailwind guide for Next.js.
  • 🧭Ensure Tailwind link components hook into Next.js routing

    Make all Tailwind link elements hook into Next.js routing by wrapping them with the Link component from next/link.
  • 🏞Create a persistent layout

    Add any components that you'd like displayed across all pages (such asNavbar and Footer) to your Next.js App component. If you need multiple persistent layouts you can instead have each page define its own layout. In that case, create multiple layout components (such as LandingPageLayout and AdminLayout) and wrap the contents of each page.
  • 🎨Finish your app UI with Tailwind

    Build out the rest of your UI using Tailwind elements and composing them into high-level page sections, such as HeroSection and AccountSettings. Use theming and dynamic classes for styling your components and overriding default element styles.

Get the code

You can get the code for this guide with our Next.js, Cloud Firestore, and Tailwind Boilerplate. You'll get a complete Next.js codebase with Cloud Firestore and Tailwind integration, all the tasks listed above done for you, and a responsive multi-page template. It should save you about two weeks of development time.

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