MDX

An alternative way to author content is using .mdx files (Markdown JSX). These files are authored as Markdown, but they are compiled down to Qwik components. In addition to Markdown syntax, .mdx files can also refer to other components.

Let's assume you have your routes set up like this:

src/
└── routes/
    └── some/
        └── path/
            └── index.mdx    # https://example.com/some/path
---
# File: src/routes/some/path/index.mdx
title: Hello World Title
---

This is a simple hello world component.

The above component will be rendered at https://example.com/some/path.

Importing other components.

MDX is a creative opportunity for you to come up with new content quickly ("Qwikly" 🙂) and if you need more interaction on your page you can seamlessly integrate your Qwik components like so:

src/
├── components/
│   └──  counter.tsx
└── routes/
    └── some/
        └── path/
            └── index.mdx    # https://example.com/some/path
---
# File: src/routes/some/path/index.mdx
title: Hello World Title
---
import { Counter } from "../../../components/counter/counter";

This is a simple hello world component.

<Counter />

// File: src/components/counter/counter.tsx
import { component$, useStyles$, useStore } from '@builder.io/qwik';

export const Counter = component$(() => {
  const store = useStore({ count: 0 });

  return (
    <button class="counter" type="button" onClick$={() => store.count++}>
      Increment {store.count}
    </button>
  );
});

Note: A key difference between Qwik City and many current meta-frameworks is directory-based routing. Every route needs to be defined as a-directory/index.(tsx,ts,js,jsx,md,mdx).

In other meta-frameworks you're used to about.mdx will render a route http://example.com/about. However, this will not work in Qwik City. You must rename the file to about/index.mdx for Qwik City to know to render it.

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