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WunderGraph + Astro

This examples shows how to use WunderGraph with Astro.

npx create-wundergraph-app --example=astro

πŸš€ Project Structure

Inside of your project, you'll see the following folders and files:

/
β”œβ”€β”€ .wundergraph/
β”‚   β”œβ”€β”€ wundergraph.config.ts
|   β”œβ”€β”€ wundergraph.operations.ts
|   β”œβ”€β”€ wundergraph.server.ts
β”‚   └── operations/
β”œβ”€β”€ public/
β”‚   └── favicon.svg
β”œβ”€β”€ src/
β”‚   β”œβ”€β”€ components/
β”‚   β”‚   └── Card.astro
β”‚   β”œβ”€β”€ layouts/
β”‚   β”‚   └── Layout.astro
β”‚   └── pages/
β”‚       └── index.astro
└── package.json

WunderGraph operations are placed in the .wundergraph/operations/ directory. Each file becomes an Operation. Operations can be written in GraphQL or TypeScript.

Astro looks for .astro or .md files in the src/pages/ directory. Each page is exposed as a route based on its file name.

There's nothing special about src/components/, but that's where we like to put any Astro/React/Vue/Svelte/Preact components.

Any static assets, like images, can be placed in the public/ directory.

🧞 Commands

All commands are run from the root of the project, from a terminal:

Command Action
npm install Installs dependencies
npm start Starts the WunderGraph and Astro dev servers
npm run wundergraph Starts local WunderGraph server at localhost:9991
npm run dev Starts local dev server at localhost:3000
npm run build Build your production site to ./dist/
npm run preview Preview your build locally, before deploying
npm run astro ... Run CLI commands like astro add, astro check
npm run astro --help Get help using the Astro CLI

Learn More

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