With Tina, your content is stored in Git along with your codebase. Tina provides a Content API in front of your repo-based content, so that you can interact with your files as if they're in a database.
You can:
To interface with the API, you can use Tina's type-safe client for data-fetching, or manually write custom GraphQL queries and hit the API yourself.
The Tina client is the easiest way to fetch your site's content. The client can be configured the tina/config.<js|ts>
in the defineConfig
function.
Note: token, clientId and branch are not used in local-mode. To setup these values for production see this doc
// tina/config.{js,ts,tsx}export default defineConfig({schema,token: '***',clientId: '***',branch: 'main',})
When working locally, the client is built with the local url (http://localhost:4001/graphql). When in production mode, clientId
, branch
and token
are used to query TinaCloud.
Tina client provides a type-safe query builder, that is auto-generated based on your site's schema:
import { client } from '../[pathToTina]/tina/__generated__/client'const myPost = await client.queries.post({ relativePath: 'HelloWorld.md' })console.log(myPost.data.title)
The above client.queries.post
query is not built-in to Tina's API. This is an example of a query based on your defined schema, (where you have a "post" collection defined).
On a page that displays a list of posts, you can fetch the posts like so:
const postsResponse = await client.queries.postConnection()const posts = postsResponse.data.postConnection.edges.map((post) => {return { slug: post.node._sys.filename }})// This would return an array like: [ { slug: 'HelloWorld.md'}, /*...*/ ]
For more information on manually writing queries for your specific schema, check out our "Writing Custom Queries" docs.
When developing locally, it's often beneficial to talk to the content on your local file-system, rather than talk to the hosted content API. Tina provides a CLI tool that lets you run the Content API locally next to your site. This allows all of your content to be made available through the same expressive GraphQL API during development.
If you setup Tina via @tinacms/cli init
, or used one of our starters, this should be setup by default. (Read about the CLI here
For those who prefer to learn from video, you can check out a snippet on "Data Fetching" from our "TinaCMS Deep Dive" series.
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