Why Should You Learn Next.js? LR Lee Robinson / November 07, 2019 4 min read • ––– views

You've heard great things about this new web framework called Next.js, but you're still not sure why people are using it.

One way to understand why you should learn Next.js is to understand what problems it solves. This directly translates to why it's become so popular.

Why Use a Framework? #

Let's say you're a new startup trying to launch a website. You might have some requirements like:

Splash page with information about the product

About page describing the team

Frequently asked questions

Capture leads through a contact form

Subscribe to a newsletter

There's nothing in these requirements which dictate the need for a framework. You could absolutely deliver on these requirements using vanilla HTML, CSS, and JavaScript.

However, if we have some foresight, we might know that future requirements call for a user authentication flow and the beginnings of a SaaS product.

The real value in using a framework is developer productivity, shared knowledge, code reuse, and creating a platform for the future. If we start with React/Next.js, we can satisfy the initial requirements with ease and pave the way for the next iteration of the product.

React has become the industry standard for building modern web applications. Of 90,000 developers surveyed by Stack Overflow, React was the most loved and most wanted web framework.

Why? With React, you can build anything from simple marketing splash pages to full-fledged web applications on the scale of Facebook. It's flexible and composable. Developers love this.

This trend means that more developers than ever are learning React, and thus JavaScript as well. It's become one of the hottest skills recruiters are looking for. JavaScript is the #1 language used according to GitHub.

For companies, this means you're more likely to find employees who already know React. For developers, this makes a very advantageous skill to add to your skillset.

According to NPM trends, it's outpacing other web frameworks like Angular and Vue by ~5 million installs/day.

This doesn't mean React is perfect. Since you're loading content client-side, you have to wait for the JavaScript bundle to load before you can determine what to show on the page. This can be problematic for users with slower connections.

Plus, search engines still struggle with indexing client-side JavaScript applications. If you're concerned about Search Engine Optimization (SEO) and want your content indexed faster, it's better to send the markup from the server. Enter Next.js.

Next.js solves both of those problems using server-side rendering. Next's framework allows you to build scalable, performant React code without the configuration hassle. That's why so many companies depend on Next for shipping production applications.

To properly ship a performant React application, there are a lot of things you must do right. You'll want to correctly configure Babel so you can use modern JavaScript features, but still support legacy browsers. You'll also want to bundle up all of your assets (e.g. multiple JavaScript files) to be included in your HTML file (using something like Webpack). The list goes on.

Wouldn't it be nice to not have to worry about this?

This "JavaScript fatigue" prompted the creation of Create React App (CRA), which dramatically improved the developer experience of spinning up a new React app. But can we do better?

Next.js supports IE11 and all modern browsers out of the box. Babel is configured for you, with an escape hatch to override if you need to.

CRA combines all the JavaScript files into a single bundle, whereas Next.js has support for code splitting. When I visit /route , we're only loading the JavaScript used on that page . Better performance!

, we're . Better performance! Want to handle routing with CRA? That will require react-router (or a similar library). Next.js has file-system based routing out of the box. No extra installation!

Did I mention Next.js can handle static sites, too?

Running next export will transform your entire Next application into a static site. One more command, and it can be deployed immediately with Vercel or Netlify.

Other frameworks force you to choose a React application or static site. Not Next.js. Your Next.js app and static site can co-exist, both living in the same codebase!

Next has so many features it's hard to capture the breadth in a single article. I would highly recommend checking out their website, trying out an example, and seeing if Next.js can help you build web applications faster.

npx create-next-app