Personal website code starter for BCMS and Next.js

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Creating a personal website that strikes the perfect balance between visual appeal and SEO-friendliness is well within the reach of developers, and BCMS, a headless CMS for NextJS, is here to make that journey even smoother.

In this tutorial, you'll explore how, as a developer, you can craft a personal website that not only looks great but also ranks well in search engines. You'll also learn why BCMS is the ideal choice for achieving this.

BCMS is more than just a content management system; it's a dynamic tool designed with developers in mind. Here's why BCMS is the perfect choice for your personal website project:

  • User-Friendly Interface: BCMS offers a simple and intuitive interface, making it easy for developers to manage and model content effortlessly. You don't need to be a CMS expert to navigate it easily.

  • Modern Technology Stack: BCMS is built on a modern tech stack, aligning perfectly with the development trends and tools you already know. It ensures you can leverage your existing skills to create a fantastic website.

  • Efficiency and Speed: One of BCMS's standout features is its efficiency. It empowers you to streamline your development process, saving time and effort in content management and allowing you to focus on what truly matters – your website's content and design.

The BCMS Personal Starter

bcms-personal-starter.png

Introducing the BCMS Personal Starter, a carefully crafted website template built with Next.js, the popular React framework for frontend development. The BCMS Personal Starter is built to help you get your site up and running without worrying about design.

This template is a starting point, allowing you to hit the ground running with your website development. It comes pre-configured with the necessary components and styles, giving you a head start and letting you customize and tailor it to your unique vision and requirements.

Check out the repo to get started.

Let's Get Started

Now that you understand the power and potential of BCMS, it's time to dive into the practical aspects of building your personal website. This tutorial will guide you through each step, providing clear instructions and real-life examples to ensure you can put your developer skills to good use and create a personal website with ease.

There are three parts to this tutorial:

  1. Setting up the BCMS.

  2. Setting up Next.js Frontend.

  3. Deploying the code to Vercel.

Setting up the BCMS

Most traditional CMSs are very complicated to set up, even for developers. One of the problems BCMS solves is removing all the unnecessary steps you need to set up a CMS. You can set up and run your BCMS in a matter of minutes.

Sign up at app.thebcms.com

Setting up the Local Environment

To begin, install the BCMS CLI:

npm install @becomes/cms-cli -g

Verify the installation by running:

bcms --help

Create a new instance of BCMS with the CLI and follow the prompts. For the project name, I will put 'bcms' just to stay consistent.

bcms --cms create

Setup is set; let's run the server. This step will pull some docker images. Wait for it to finish.

docker-compose up
docker-compose.png

Go to "http://localhost:8080" to verify our server is running.

hello-dev.png

Voila! We have successfully set up a local instance of BCMS.

Creating Data Models for frontend

Alright, now let's talk about data models. In the BCMS world, it's all about how you structure your data. It's like the blueprint for your content, where you specify the fields and their data types.

Let's put it in context. If you're dealing with products or articles, your data model might look something like this:

//Product
product_name: string
product_price: number
product_sku: number
product_image: string[]
product_quanity: number

BCMS simplifies this process. Data modeling and content creation in BCMS are a breeze, with just two steps:

  • Templates: These are pre-defined structures for your content. Based on these templates, you can create one or more content.

  • Entries: These are individual records or content based on a template. Think of a template as the blueprint for what an entry should look like.

Now that you've got a better grip on BCMS data modeling, let's move on with our tutorial.

Before we create templates, it's a good idea to have a clear vision of what they should look like. In our case, we're building a personal site that looks like this:

personal-example.png

Looking at this design, we'll need a title, about me text, contact links, skills with years of experience, and a photo. Let's head to BCMS and bring it to life.

Open your browser and go to "http://localhost:8080", then click "Templates."

bcms-template-.png

Create a new template called "homepage." You can add an optional description, but we'll leave it blank. Choose "single entry" because the homepage content is unique and serves a single purpose.

create-new-template.png

Based on the design I am aiming for, let's add template properties:

title: string
about_me: RichText
image: Media
homepage.png

Now, let's create templates for skills and contact links using the same process. The only difference is that this time, I won't choose "single entry."

new-template-single-entry.png

Skills template

name: string
years_of_experience: number

Contact links template

label: string
href: string

Now that all templates are ready, let's proceed to entries and adding data. Add all the required data for the homepage, contact list, and skills, just like this:

contact-list.png
title-contact-list.png
skills.png

Phew! You're doing great. This is how to set up BCMS successfully. It's easy, straightforward, and, most importantly, developer-friendly. Keep up the good work, and stay tuned for the next part of this exciting journey.

Setting up the Nextjs frontend

Next.js, a robust React framework, streamlines the development of fast and scalable web applications while enhancing developer experience and performance.

In this tutorial, I'll use the BCMS CLI to scaffold a customized Next.js project that seamlessly integrates with BCMS effortlessly. By simply executing the BCMS CLI command and specifying your project's name and type, you'll have a fully prepared Next.js project ready to go.

Learn more: Why BCMS is the Best CMS for NextJS: 6 Less Obvious Reasons

Navigate to the "personal-site" directory created earlier and execute the BCMS CLI command:

cd personal site && bcms --website create

You'll be prompted to select a framework, and in our case, it's Next.js. Wait for the process to complete, then open your project in your IDE to begin integrating BCMS.

Creating API keys For The Frontend

To use BCMS in our Next.js project, you need API keys. Visit the BCMS server, go to "Key Management," and click "Add New Key." For this tutorial, let's name it "PERSONAL_SITE."

creating-api-keys.png
personal-site.png

Now that we have the key let's proceed to add it to our Next.js project.

Within the project, navigate to the bcms.config.js file and add our newly created keys. The "origin" field should point to our server's URL, which, in this case, is [http://localhost:8080] (Be sure to update this to your production URL when you deploy the server).

const { createBcmsMostConfig } = require('@becomes/cms-most');
module.exports = createBcmsMostConfig({
  cms: {
    origin:
      process.env.BCMS_API_ORIGIN ||
      'http://localhost:8080',
    key: {
      id: process.env.BCMS_API_KEY || '654246b0be81ac0b54dbd06f',
      secret:
        process.env.BCMS_API_SECRET ||
        'a4a3b327bd9cc015c905c7c3340efb55976d97c1e2e1446cc3bbc62bb860143f',
    },
  },
  media: {
    output: 'public/api',
    download: true,
  },
  enableClientCache: true,
});

Likewise, go to the "_app.tsx" file and add our API keys:

import '../styles/globals.css';
import type { AppProps } from 'next/app';
import { BCMSImageConfig } from '@becomes/cms-most/frontend';
BCMSImageConfig.cmsOrigin =
  process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_BCMS_API_ORIGIN ||
  'http://localhost:8080';
BCMSImageConfig.publicApiKeyId =
  process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_BCMS_API_PUBLIC_KEY_ID || '654246b0be81ac0b54dbd06f';
function MyApp({ Component, pageProps }: AppProps): JSX.Element {
  return <Component {...pageProps} />;
}
export default MyApp;

With API keys added to the project, it is time to verify if it can fetch data by running npm run dev to start the development server.

Fetching And Displaying Data On The Frontend

I will use Next.js' getStaticProps to fetch our data and the official BCMS client library to interact with the CMS, which is already included in our project.

Let's create the getStaticProps function in our "index.tsx" file:

export const getStaticProps: GetStaticProps = async () => {
  
};

Now, let’s add the BCMS client library and fetch the homepage_entry

export const getStaticProps: GetStaticProps = async () => {
    const client = getBcmsClient();
    const data = await client.entry.get({template: 'home_page', entry: 'home'}) as HomePageEntry;
    const parsedData = data.meta.en;
    return {
        props: {
            ...parsedData
        }
    };
};

In this step, I instantiate the getBcmsClient, fetch a single entry (homepage entry) by providing the template ID and the entry title (found on the BCMS server), and return the data.

In the same function, let's fetch skills and contact links entries:

export const getStaticProps: GetStaticProps = async () => {
    const client = getBcmsClient();
    
    const homepage = await client.entry.get({template: 'home_page', entry: 'home'}) as HomePageEntry;
    
    const skills = await client.entry.getAll({template: 'skills'}) as SkillsEntry[]
    
    const contactList = await client.entry.getAll({template: 'contact_list'}) as ContactListEntry[]
   
    return {
        props: {
            homepage: homepage.meta.en,
            skills: skills.map(s => s.meta.en),
            contactList: contactList.map(s => s.meta.en)
        }
    };
};

In this step, I fetched the skills and contact list entries using the BCMS client getAll and returning the data.

Now, let's display the data on the index page component. I'll use components created by BCMS to handle complex data types like "rich text" and "images." These components simplify parsing and displaying these data types. I'll use BCMSContentManager for rich text and BCMSImage for images.

const Home: NextPage<HomePageProps> = (props) => {
  return (
    <div>
      <div>
        <div>
          <div>
            <h1>Jay Auwal</h1>
            <div />
          </div>
          <div>
            <div>
              <h3>About me</h3>
              <BCMSContentManager
                items={props.homepage.about_me}
                widgetComponents={{}}
              />
              <div>
                {props.contactList.map((contact, index) => (
                  <Link href={contact.href as string} key={index}>
                    {contact.label}
                  </Link>
                ))}
              </div>
            </div>
            <div>
              <BCMSImage media={props.homepage.image} />
            </div>
            <div>
              <h3>Skills</h3>
              <div>
                {props.skills.map((s, index) => (
                  <div key={index}>
                    <h3>{s.name}</h3>
                    <span>{`${s.years_of experience} years of experience`}</span>
                  </div>
                ))}
              </div>
            </div>
          </div>
        </div>
      </div>
    </div>
  );
};

In this step, I got my data from BCMS via getStaticProps and display that data on the frontend using TSX/JSX

Now, let’s add styling to the code to make it prettier. I will be using Tailwind to do that. we won’t go deep into a tailwind. I will add the classes, and our code will look like this:

const Home: NextPage<HomePageProps> = ( props) => {
  return (
    <div className="bg-white flex-1 h-full">
      <div className="mx-auto px-[100px] py-10">
        <div className="flex flex-col">
          <div className="flex flex-row items-baseline w-full">
              <h1 className="text-[160px] leading-[80px] text-gray-600">Jay Auwal</h1>
              <div className="rounded-full w-12 h-12 bg-gray-600 my-5" />
          </div>
            <div className="grid grid-cols-3 mt-10 gap-5 w-full">
                <div className="flex flex-col">
                    <h3 className="font-bold text-4xl mb-4">About me</h3>
                    <BCMSContentManager
                        className="text-gray-600 font-medium leading-8"
                        items={props.homepage.about_me}
                        widgetComponents={{}}
                        />
                    <div className="flex mt-auto pb-5 flex-wrap space-x-3 items-center underline">
                        {props.contactList.map((contact, index) => (
                            <Link href={contact.href as string} key={index}>
                                {contact.label}
                            </Link>
                        ))}
                    </div>
                </div>
                <div className="overflow-hidden">
                    <BCMSImage
                       className="aspect-[4/3]"
                       media={props.homepage.image}
                    />
                </div>
                <div className="flex flex-col">
                    <h3 className="font-bold text-xl mb-4">Skills</h3>
                    <div className="grid grid-row-1 gap-5">
                        {props.skills.map((s, index) => (
                            <div key={index} className="rounded-lg border-[1px] border-gray-600 p-5">
                                <h3 className="font-bold text-xl">{s.name}</h3>
                                <span className="text-gray-600">{`${s.years_of_experience} years of experience`}</span>
                            </div>
                        ))}
                    </div>
                </div>
            </div>
        </div>
      </div>
    </div>
  );
};

Perfect! BCMS and Next.js integration is done.

Deploying the code to Vercel

The simplest way to deploy a nextjs application is using Vercel.

First, make sure your project is working and getting built correctly. Run npm run build, and if there are no errors, then we are good to go.

  1. Create a Vercel account

  2. Connect your GitHub account with Vercel

  3. Push your code to the main branch

  4. Import the project from GitHub to your Vercel account

  5. Create environmental variables (API keys and ID)

  6. And click on deploy

You can learn more about deploying to Vercel in this article.

BCMS Portfolio starter: Get ready to show the world who you are

This is what Nextjs headless CMS looks like. You've learned how to create and manage API keys, fetch data from BCMS, and display it on the frontend. You can build countless NextJS examples that are powerful, content-driven web applications using this foundation.

Remember that BCMS headless CMS, generates type definitions for entries and templates, making your development process more efficient and type-safe. You can explore and customize your project further, adding your unique features and design elements.

I hope this tutorial has been helpful in your journey to create your personal site or any content-driven web application. Thank you for joining us, and best of luck with your projects. If you have any questions or need further assistance, feel free to reach out. Happy coding!

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