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In Next.js, we can serve static pages like images very easily by putting them in public, a top level directory. We can refer these files in similar fashion like pages in pages directory.
In Next.js, a page is a React Component and are exported from pages directory. Each page is associated with a route based on its file name.
Let”s update the nextjs project used in Pages chapter.
Create public directory and place any images within it. We”ve taken logo.png, TutorialsPoint Logo image.
Update first.js as follows −
import Link from ''next/link'' export default function FirstPost() { return ( <> <h1>My First Post</h1> <h2> <Link href="/"> <a>Home</a> </Link> </h2> <br/"> <img src="/logo.png" alt="TutorialsPoint Logo" /> </> ) }
Here we”ve added a reference to logo.png in index.js file.
Start Next.js Server
Run the following command to start the server −.
npm run dev > [email protected] dev Nodenextjs > next ready - started server on http://localhost:3000 event - compiled successfully event - build page: / wait - compiling... event - compiled successfully event - build page: /next/dist/pages/_error wait - compiling... event - compiled successfully
Verify Output
Open localhost:3000 in a browser and you will see the following output.
public directory is also useful in case of SEO purpose. It can be used for robot.txt, Google Site verification or any other static assets in the web application.
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