Jamstack

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jamstack, previously stylized as JAMStack, stands for JavaScript, API and Markup (generated by a static site generator) and was first coined by Mathias Biilmann, CEO of Netlify in 2015.[1] In Jamstack websites, the application logic typically resides on the client side (for example embedded e-commerce checkout that interacts with pre-rendered static content), without being tightly coupled to the back end server. They are mostly served with git based CMS or headless CMS.[1][2] Netlify organizes a conference every year called "Popular Jamstack" that is co-hosted amongst others by Vercel and Cloudflare Pages.[3]

The Jamstack is not a framework but is rather defined by Jamstack.org as an architecture pattern.[4]

References[]

  1. ^ a b Cardoza, Christine (2020-07-06). "Jamstack brings front-end development back into focus". SD Times. Retrieved 2021-04-05.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ Biilmann, Mathias (2019). Modern Web development on the JAMstack : modern techniques for ultra fast sites and web applications. Phil Hawksworth. Sebastopol, CA. ISBN 9781492058564. OCLC 1123220815.
  3. ^ "Cloudflare is testing a Netlify competitor to host Jamstack sites". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2021-04-05.
  4. ^ "What is Jamstack?". Jamstack.org.

External[]

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