About this guide
This development guide walks you through everything you need to do to build a high-quality Next.js app integrated with Supabase Auth and Material UI. 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
Create a Next.js app using Setup your Next.js app
npx create-next-app
and then run your project locally with thenpm run dev
command.Create an Create a Supabase AuthProvider and useAuth hook
AuthProvider
component that fetches the current user from Supabase, subscribes to changes, stores the user in state, and then makes all this data available to child components usingContext.Provider
. Make sure to update your Next.jsApp
component so thatAuthProvider
wraps all your pages. You'll then create auseAuth
hook that reads the user withuseContext
and returns its value. This will enable any component to calluseAuth
to get the current user and re-render when it changes.Create a Protect pages with a Supabase requireAuth HOC
requireAuth
higher order component for pages that should only be viewable by authenticated users. It should call youruseAuth
hook internally to get the current user, show a loading indicator while waiting on the response, and then either render the page or redirect to/signin
depending on whether the user is authenticated. For the loading indicator you might try aCircularProgress
component centered on the page.Create an authentication UI using Material UI components and Supabase functions. You'll want routes for user sign-up, sign-in, forgot password, and change password. Make sure you properly validate inputs and display any errors returned by Supabase. You may also want to use a library, such as Build your authentication UIReact Hook Form, for managing form state.
You can connect Google Analytics sessions to the current authenticated user with the Link user to analytics sessionUser ID feature. This allows you to see what your users are doing across sessions and devices. You'll need to update your
useAuth
hook to set theuser_id
property whenever the user changes.You'll need to server-render your Material UI styles to avoid a flash of unstyled content before your client-side javascript loads. To do this you'll need to update your Next.js Server render Material UI styles with Next.js
Document
component to extract component styles. After mount you'll then remove the server stylesheet so that the client can take over with style management.Make all Material UI link components hook into Next.js routing by wrapping them with the Ensure Material UI link components hook into Next.js routing
Link
component fromnext/link
and settingpassHref
to true.Add any components that you'd like displayed across all pages (such as Create a persistent layout
Navbar
andFooter
) to your Next.jsApp
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 asLandingPageLayout
andAdminLayout
) and wrap the contents of each page.Add the Material UI Add a Material UI ThemeProvider
ThemeProvider
component so that you customize theme values. If your entire app uses the same theme (as opposed to different nested themes), then the best way to do this is update your Next.jsApp
component so thatThemeProvider
wraps all your pages.To support Add dark mode supportdark mode you'll need to define a light and dark Material UI theme object, read the user's preference from local storage on mount, fall back to their browser default using
prefers-color-scheme
, and pass the correct theme object toThemeProvider
. You'll also want to create auseDarkMode
React hook that any component can call to get/toggle the user's preference. Be sure to check out our example Material UI components with dark mode toggle.Build out the rest of your UI using Material UI components and composing them into high-level page sections, such as Finish your app UI with Material UI
HeroSection
andAccountSettings
. Use Material UI's CSS-in-JS solution for styling your components and overriding default component styles. You should find our library of pre-built Material UI components to be helpful.
Get the code
You can get the code for this guide with our Next.js, Supabase Auth, and Material UI Boilerplate. You'll get a complete Next.js codebase with Supabase Auth and Material UI 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.
127 downloads today