This commit introduces the initial skeleton structure for several frontend pages as per the e-commerce starter kit plan:
- Home Page: Modified to support CMS-configurable sections (mocked).
- Content Pages: Added dynamic route for CMS-based content (mocked).
- Product Detail Page: Displays product information (mocked).
- Product List/Category Page: Displays products with mock filters/search.
- Search Page: Implements mock Relewise-powered search.
- Login Page: Basic login form structure.
- My Page: Sections for orders, quotes, downloads, profile (mocked).
- Cart & Checkout Page: Cart management and checkout form structure (mocked).
Additionally, this commit includes:
- A fix for a TypeScript type error in `app/content/[slug]/page.tsx` related to `PageProps` by introducing an explicit `ContentPageProps` interface.
- Addition of basic navigation links in the main navbar to improve site traversability.
We're making some updates to Next.js Commerce. Everything prior to this commit marks what we're calling [`v1`](https://github.com/vercel/commerce/releases/tag/v1) as a point in time to be able to reference and still use going into the future. The current architecture of Commerce is a multi-vendor, interoperable solution, including:
- [Shopify](https://shopify.vercel.store/)
- [Swell](https://swell.vercel.store/)
- [BigCommerce](https://bigcommerce.vercel.store/)
- [Vendure](https://vendure.vercel.store/)
- [Saleor](https://saleor.vercel.store/)
- [Ordercloud](https://ordercloud.vercel.store/)
- [Spree](https://spree.vercel.store/)
- [Kibo Commerce](https://kibocommerce.vercel.store/)
- [Commerce.js](https://commercejs.vercel.store/)
- [SalesForce Cloud Commerce](https://salesforce-cloud-commerce.vercel.store/)
All features can be toggled on or off, and it's easy to change between commerce providers. To support this, we needed to create a ["commerce metaframework"](d1d9e8c434/packages/commerce/new-provider.md) where providers could confirm to an API spec to add support for Next.js Commerce. While this worked and was successful for `v1`, we have different design goals and ambitions for `v2`.
**What You Need To Know**
- `v1` will not be updated moving forward. If you need to reference `v1`, you will still be able to clone and deploy the version tagged at this release.
- `v2` will be shifting to be a single provider vs. provider agnostic. Other providers are welcome to fork this repository and swap out the underlying `lib/` implementation that connects to the selected commerce provider (Shopify). This architecture was chosen to reduce the surface area of the codebase, remove the intermediate metaframework layer for provider-interoperability, and enable usage with the latest Next.js and React features.
- We will be sharing more about `v2` in the future as we continue to iterate before the marked release.