September 9, 2024
Redwood now ships with background job support! Scheduling, storing, and running your jobs is handled by Redwood!
Redwood now ships with background job support! Scheduling, storing, and running your jobs is handled by Redwood!
We recently switched our main website from Netlify to Fly.io. This was a pretty smooth process and we're happy with the results. Here's a quick overview of our experience.
Redwood aims is to provide a fast, robust and comprehensible React Server Component experience. We're iterating towards improving that experience by adding a RSC development server that supports live reload. What is Live Reload? Live reload is a feat...
After ReactConf 2024 I was inspired by this tweet: https://x.com/chantastic/status/1791531154212033004 In it, Sam Selikoff says that the JS ecosystem has yet to demonstrate the same kind of powerful forms that have been available in Rails since jus...
We recently redesigned our website for the new "Bighorn" epoch of Redwood. This included starting this series of blog posts which had a fun side effect of giving us an exercise to solve. How do we implement an RSS feed when our blog is built into a R...
💡 og:image Middleware is only available in the latest canaries of Redwood!
An introduction to the new middleware in RedwoodJS
As big fans of the dog fooding principle, we want to put RSC through its paces by using it to build more than just a demo app. As Redwood's support for RSC becomes more mature we are going to need to document it with the same attention we pay to the ...
All SaaS applications involve CRUD - Creating, Reading, Updating, and Deleting. Therefore, the way we fetch data naturally becomes a major piece of the developer experience and one of the many problems that a framework is able to solve.
Right now, there are a few key players in the React space: Next.js, Remix, and RedwoodJS. If I stack them next to each other, there are a few key differences. It's helpful to recognize these, so you can make informed decisions about the tooling and y...
Redwood's preview of React Server Component support is now available! Follow this walkthrough to find out what's new and how to covert an app from GraphQL.
Nine months ago, the RedwoodJS team decided to go all-in on React Server Components. The first version of Redwood that fully supports RSC will begin the Bighorn epoch. Today I'm excited to bring you an update on our work towards that goal.
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