- Install MongoDB or Podman.
- Setup an application in Clerk (https://clerk.com/docs/quickstarts/nextjs). Make sure your
NEXT_PUBLIC_CLERK_PUBLISHABLE_KEYandCLERK_SECRET_KEYare environment variables are set.
Enhance your Nx experience by installing Nx Console for your favorite editor. Nx Console provides an interactive UI to view your projects, run tasks, generate code, and more! Available for VSCode, IntelliJ and comes with a LSP for Vim users.
- Start a MongoDB server, make sure your
MONGODB_URIenvironment variable is set. You may usescripts/run_podman_mongo.shto start a MongoDB server in a podman container. - Run
npx nx dev webto start the development server. Happy coding!
Run npx nx build web to build the application. The build artifacts are stored in the output directory (e.g. dist/ or build/), ready to be deployed.
To execute tasks with Nx use the following syntax:
npx nx <target> <project> <...options>
You can also run multiple targets:
npx nx run-many -t <target1> <target2>
..or add -p to filter specific projects
npx nx run-many -t <target1> <target2> -p <proj1> <proj2>
Targets can be defined in the package.json or projects.json. Learn more in the docs.
Nx comes with local caching already built-in (check your nx.json). On CI you might want to go a step further.
Run npx nx graph to show the graph of the workspace.
It will show tasks that you can run with Nx.