![]() Luckily for you, for the last couple of years, there has been a slew of CMSes that offer APIs you can use with your frontend technology of choice. Because most modern website frameworks come with ways of doing a request when the site builds or renders that can be used inside of its templating language. And if you plan to use a modern frontend framework, then you’ll need that CMS to have an API. You figure out that you need a Content Management System – a CMS – that gives your clients a dashboard where they can log in, create, update, and maintain their content. And you’re not sure if having them write Markdown is going to fly either. Because your clients shouldn’t have to commit to GitHub to get their content out. But you don’t want to do that for this website project. It floats your boat and updating the blog is as easy as pushing to your main branch on GitHub. Nothing wrong with that!įor your own blog, you’ve got some static site generator that sits on top of Markdown files. You’re pretty sure the styling will happen in Styled Components, or maybe Tailwind is your go-to, or maybe you prefer writing your CSS the good old-fashioned way. ![]() Or maybe you’re curious about the buzz around Remix. Maybe it’s Next.js, SvelteKit, or Nuxt.js. You probably have technologies you’d prefer to work in. Imagine you have a new website project ahead of you.
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