![]() ![]() This article’s scope is strictly about the main character of the announcement: the new App Directory architecture (AppDir, for short).īecause the App directory is the one that keeps bringing questions due to it being partnered with an important evolution in the React ecosystem - React Server Components - and with edge runtimes. ![]() Whether you can or can’t use it in your daily routine depends on your stack, as there are integrations and optimizations still somewhere on the way. Turbopack, as clearly stated in the announcement, is still alpha: aimed strictly for development builds and still heavily under development. And since then, most of us have seen a very clear landscape when it comes to the new and components, and even the (still beta) these are all good to go, instant profit. On “ What’s New in Next.js 13?” we have covered the release announced and established that though carrying some interesting experiments, Next.js 13 is definitely stable. Since Next.js 13 release, there’s been some debate about how stable the shiny new features packed in the announcement are. In this article, Atila Fassina explores the advantages and pitfalls of this new strategy and reflects on whether you should use it in production now or not. The new App Directory architecture has been the main character of the recent Next.js release, which keeps bringing up many questions. ![]()
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