/talktogpt

Making the ChatGPT experience feel like talking to a human.

Primary LanguageJavaScript

👉 Get Started

Install dependencies

npm install

Update your .env file with values for each environment variable. Reference .example.env if needed, but may not be updated.

API_KEY=
etc ...

Run the development server

npm run dev

When the above command completes you'll be able to view your website at http://localhost:3000

🥞 Stack

This project uses the following libraries and services:

📚 Guide

Routing

This project uses the built-in Next.js router and its convenient useRouter hook. Learn more in the Next.js docs.

import Link from 'next/link';
import { useRouter } from 'next/router';

function MyComponent() {
  // Get the router object
  const router = useRouter();

  // Get value from query string (?postId=123) or route param (/:postId)
  console.log(router.query.postId);

  // Get current pathname
  console.log(router.pathname);

  // Navigate with the <Link> component or with router.push()
  return (
    <div>
      <Link href='/about'>
        <a>About</a>
      </Link>
      <button onClick={(e) => router.push('/about')}>About</button>
    </div>
  );
}

Authentication

This project uses Supabase and includes a convenient useAuth hook (located in src/util/auth.js) that wraps Supabase and gives you common authentication methods. Depending on your needs you may want to edit this file and expose more Supabase functionality.

import { useAuth } from './../util/auth.js';

function MyComponent() {
  // Get the auth object in any component
  const auth = useAuth();

  // Depending on auth state show signin or signout button
  // auth.user will either be an object, null when loading, or false if signed out
  return (
    <div>
      {auth.user ? (
        <button onClick={(e) => auth.signout()}>Signout</button>
      ) : (
        <button onClick={(e) => auth.signin('hello@divjoy.com', 'yolo')}>
          Signin
        </button>
      )}
    </div>
  );
}

Database

This project uses Supabase and includes some data fetching hooks to get you started (located in src/util/db.js). You'll want to edit that file and add any additional query hooks you need for your project.

import { useAuth } from './../util/auth.js';
import { useItemsByOwner } from './../util/db.js';
import ItemsList from './ItemsList.js';

function ItemsPage(){
  const auth = useAuth();

  // Fetch items by owner
  // Returned status value will be "idle" if we're waiting on
  // the uid value or "loading" if the query is executing.
  const uid = auth.user ? auth.user.uid : undefined;
  const { data: items, status } = useItemsByOwner(uid);

  // Once we have items data render ItemsList component
  return (
    <div>
      {(status === "idle" || status === "loading") ? (
        <span>One moment please</span>
      ) : (
        <ItemsList data={items}>
      )}
    </div>
  );
}

Deployment

Install the Vercel CLI

npm install -g vercel

Link codebase to a Vercel project

vercel link

Add each variable from your .env file to your Vercel project, including the ones prefixed with "NEXT_PUBLIC_". You'll be prompted to enter its value and choose one or more environments (development, preview, or production). See Vercel Environment Variables to learn more about how this works, how to update values through the Vercel UI, and how to use secrets for extra security.

vercel env add plain VARIABLE_NAME

Run this command to deploy to a unique preview URL. Your "preview" environment variables will be used.

vercel

Run this command to deploy to your production domain. Your "production" environment variables will be used.

vercel --prod

See Vercel Deployments for more details.

Other

This project was created using Divjoy, the React codebase generator. You can find more info in the Divjoy Docs.