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What Developers Told Us about Vercel's Next.js Update
Frontend Development / Software Development

What Developers Told Us about Vercel’s Next.js Update

Developers say changes to Next.js will help support their work on the web and improve the developer experience.
Nov 1st, 2022 9:01am by Loraine Lawson
👁 Featued image for: What Developers Told Us about Vercel’s Next.js Update

It was a small, less heralded part of the Next.js 13 release that excited frontend developer Sophia Andren.

Andren is a technical director and developer with the San Diego, Calif.-based alternative design firm candycode. She and designer Jessie Waters attended the Next.js conference in San Francisco to learn what they could about Vercel and its Next.js 13 release. It will help them keep sites more tightly branded, Andren told The New Stack.

Both have worked with all the major React frameworks — including Gatsby, Next.js and Remix — for clients, but after the Oct. 25 conference, they’ve decided to use Next.js on Vercel for candycode’s own website.

Specifically, Andren liked the changes to the developer toolkit that included enhanced font support, which makes it easier to work with custom fonts and Google fonts; an enhance image optimization component; and the instant Open Graph (OG) Image Generation, a new library for generating dynamic social card images.

“The Next.js 13 release is really a game changer for creative agencies that are leaning into the future of technology,” she said. “The new improvements to images, fonts, and social cards make it significantly easier to craft polished digital experiences in an era when attention spans are shrinking and consumer expectations are growing.”

TurboPack Trepidation and Love

One of the most controversial of the announcements was the news that Turbopack, a new Rust-based bundler for JavaScript and TypeScript, will replace Webpack, leading one developer at the conference to comment that she felt like the rug had been pulled from beneath her feet.

Vercel assured the audience that there would be a path to adoption and that it could be implemented incrementally.

But for Chiedo John, director of software engineering at Github, it was welcome news.

“I absolutely loved the Turbopack announcement!” John told The New Stack. “Anything to keep people in flow state goes a long way. And the fact that so much of the value can be adopted incrementally is amazing and makes it practical to adopt from a cost perspective.”

Incremental Adoption: Yes, Please

Overall, developers told The New Stack they were impressed by the new release. Though some at the event expressed concerns about migration issues with Turbopack, Vercel appeared to mitigate those concerns with its incremental adoption approach.

“There were some concerns about the adoption of Turbopack, Vercel’s new Rust-based bundler,” acknowledged Matthew Lewis, senior software engineer with technology services firm PeakActivity. “While talking to other developers, a common concern was Tailwind CSS support. However, the Next team has done a great job of allowing incremental adoption of new features and I’m confident their team and the community will solve this problem.”

New Layouts

Lewis has been excited to hear about the new layouts since Next released their request for comment in May. He appreciated the expert product demos, which let developers see how the implementation played out.

“Not only did Next deliver an innovative feature, but they also kept developer experience in mind by giving us a standard for project structure,” he said. “The simple structure of page, layout, error and loading gives developers more confidence when navigating a large code base and provides us an effective solution for providing core, user experience fundamentals.”

React Server Components

Yang Zang also liked the new layout system, saying it was exciting to see Next.js positioning itself for complex apps as well as marketing and e-commerce websites. Yang is a software engineer and co-founder of Plasmic, a React-based no-code content management system.

“This is in line with our direction as well, as Plasmic is a React-based visual builder spanning websites and soon applications,” he said.

He called the new React server components “a significant architectural change” that “will unlock a new level of performance for React — with partial hydration.”

“We’ve seen newer competing frameworks nipping away at the performance story, but React server components means you can get the performance benefits without sacrificing the ability to build rich, complex interactivity the React way,” Zang said. “Importantly, the (Next.js) React team has never been afraid to reinvent the framework — doing so while bringing along a giant ecosystem with backward compatibility is a huge challenge that they’ve navigated well overall.”

Building upon a foundation like Next.js is critical to Plasmic’s goal of democratizing software, he added.

There was one common factor that several developers mentioned: An appreciation for Vercel’s focus on the developer experience.

“Vercel is doing revolutionary work here that will drastically improve the way developers develop,” John said.

Vercel paid for travel and accommodation for Loraine Lawson to attend the conference.

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Loraine Lawson is a veteran technology reporter who has covered technology issues from data integration to security for 25 years. Before joining The New Stack, she served as the editor of the banking technology site Bank Automation News. She has...
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