Welcome to your new TanStack Start app!
To run this application:
npm install
npm run dev
To build this application for production:
npm run build
This project uses Vitest for testing. You can run the tests with:
npm run test
This project uses Tailwind CSS for styling.
If you prefer not to use Tailwind CSS:
src/routes/demo/src/styles.css with your own stylestailwindcss() from the plugins array in vite.config.tsnpm install @tailwindcss/vite tailwindcss -DThis project uses Biome for linting and formatting. The following scripts are available:
npm run lint
npm run format
npm run check
This project uses the Cloudflare Vite plugin (configured in vite.config.ts) and wrangler.jsonc:
npm install -g wranglerwrangler loginnpx wrangler deployFor production env vars, run wrangler secret put MY_VAR for each secret listed in .env.example. Public (non-secret) vars go in wrangler.jsonc under vars.
KV, D1, R2, and Durable Object bindings are configured in wrangler.jsonc — see https://developers.cloudflare.com/workers/wrangler/configuration/.
Am example chat application built with TanStack Start, TanStack Store, and Claude AI.
ANTHROPIC_API_KEY=your_anthropic_api_key
Add components using the latest version of Shadcn.
pnpm dlx shadcn@latest add button
This project uses TanStack Router with file-based routing. Routes are managed as files in src/routes.
To add a new route to your application just add a new file in the ./src/routes directory.
TanStack will automatically generate the content of the route file for you.
Now that you have two routes you can use a Link component to navigate between them.
To use SPA (Single Page Application) navigation you will need to import the Link component from @tanstack/react-router.
import { Link } from "@tanstack/react-router";
Then anywhere in your JSX you can use it like so:
<Link to="/about">About</Link>
This will create a link that will navigate to the /about route.
More information on the Link component can be found in the Link documentation.
In the File Based Routing setup the layout is located in src/routes/__root.tsx. Anything you add to the root route will appear in all the routes. The route content will appear in the JSX where you render {children} in the shellComponent.
Here is an example layout that includes a header:
import { HeadContent, Scripts, createRootRoute } from '@tanstack/react-router'
export const Route = createRootRoute({
head: () => ({
meta: [
{ charSet: 'utf-8' },
{ name: 'viewport', content: 'width=device-width, initial-scale=1' },
{ title: 'My App' },
],
}),
shellComponent: ({ children }) => (
<html lang="en">
<head>
<HeadContent />
</head>
<body>
<header>
<nav>
<Link to="/">Home</Link>
<Link to="/about">About</Link>
</nav>
</header>
{children}
<Scripts />
</body>
</html>
),
})
More information on layouts can be found in the Layouts documentation.
TanStack Start provides server functions that allow you to write server-side code that seamlessly integrates with your client components.
import { createServerFn } from '@tanstack/react-start'
const getServerTime = createServerFn({
method: 'GET',
}).handler(async () => {
return new Date().toISOString()
})
// Use in a component
function MyComponent() {
const [time, setTime] = useState('')
useEffect(() => {
getServerTime().then(setTime)
}, [])
return <div>Server time: {time}</div>
}
You can create API routes by using the server property in your route definitions:
import { createFileRoute } from '@tanstack/react-router'
import { json } from '@tanstack/react-start'
export const Route = createFileRoute('/api/hello')({
server: {
handlers: {
GET: () => json({ message: 'Hello, World!' }),
},
},
})
There are multiple ways to fetch data in your application. You can use TanStack Query to fetch data from a server. But you can also use the loader functionality built into TanStack Router to load the data for a route before it’s rendered.
For example:
import { createFileRoute } from '@tanstack/react-router'
export const Route = createFileRoute('/people')({
loader: async () => {
const response = await fetch('https://swapi.dev/api/people')
return response.json()
},
component: PeopleComponent,
})
function PeopleComponent() {
const data = Route.useLoaderData()
return (
<ul>
{data.results.map((person) => (
<li key={person.name}>{person.name}</li>
))}
</ul>
)
}
Loaders simplify your data fetching logic dramatically. Check out more information in the Loader documentation.
Files prefixed with demo can be safely deleted. They are there to provide a starting point for you to play around with the features you’ve installed.
You can learn more about all of the offerings from TanStack in the TanStack documentation.
For TanStack Start specific documentation, visit TanStack Start.