Add a New Solid Project

The code for this example is available on GitHub:

Supported Features

Because we are not using an Nx plugin for Solid, there are a few items we'll have to configure manually. We'll have to configure our own build system. There are no pre-created Solid-specific code generators. And we'll have to take care of updating any framework dependencies as needed.

✅ Run Tasks ✅ Cache Task Results ✅ Share Your Cache ✅ Explore the Graph ✅ Distribute Task Execution ✅ Integrate with Editors ✅ Automate Updating Nx ✅ Enforce Module Boundaries 🚫 Use Code Generators 🚫 Automate Updating Framework Dependencies

Install Solid and Other Dependencies

npm add solid-js

npm add -D solid-devtools vite-plugin-solid

nx add @nx/web

Create an Application

Directory Flag Behavior Changes

The command below uses the as-provided directory flag behavior, which is the default in Nx 16.8.0. If you're on an earlier version of Nx or using the derived option, omit the --directory flag. See the as-provided vs. derived documentation for more details.

We'll start with a web application and then tweak the settings to match what we need. Add a new web application to your workspace with the following command:

nx g @nx/web:app my-solid-app --directory=apps/my-solid-app --bundler=vite

The @nx/web:app generator will create some files that are unnecessary for our Solid application.

The files and folders to be deleted are:

  • apps/my-solid-app/public/
  • apps/my-solid-app/src/app/
  • apps/my-solid-app/src/main.ts
  • apps/my-solid-app/src/styles.css
  • apps/my-solid-app/.babelrc

Turn the Application into a Solid Application

Now we'll create the files that are necessary to turn our application into a Solid application.

Add the following files

apps/my-solid-app/src/App.tsx
1import type { Component } from 'solid-js'; 2 3const App: Component = () => { 4 return ( 5 <div> 6 <header> 7 <p> 8 Edit <code>src/App.tsx</code> and save to reload. 9 </p> 10 <a 11 href="https://github.com/solidjs/solid" 12 target="_blank" 13 rel="noopener noreferrer" 14 > 15 Learn Solid Now 16 </a> 17 </header> 18 </div> 19 ); 20}; 21 22export default App; 23
apps/my-solid-app/src/index.tsx
1/* @refresh reload */ 2import { render } from 'solid-js/web'; 3 4import App from './App'; 5 6const root = document.getElementById('root'); 7 8if (import.meta.env.DEV && !(root instanceof HTMLElement)) { 9 throw new Error( 10 'Root element not found. Did you forget to add it to your index.html? Or maybe the id attribute got misspelled?' 11 ); 12} 13 14render(() => <App />, root!); 15

Update the following files

apps/my-solid-app/index.html
1<!DOCTYPE html> 2<html lang="en"> 3 <head> 4 <meta charset="utf-8" /> 5 <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" /> 6 <meta name="theme-color" content="#000000" /> 7 <title>Solid App</title> 8 </head> 9 <body> 10 <noscript>You need to enable JavaScript to run this app.</noscript> 11 <div id="root"></div> 12 13 <script src="src/index.tsx" type="module"></script> 14 </body> 15</html> 16
apps/my-solid-app/vite.config.ts
1/// <reference types="vitest" /> 2import { defineConfig } from 'vite'; 3import solidPlugin from 'vite-plugin-solid'; 4// import devtools from 'solid-devtools/vite'; 5 6import viteTsConfigPaths from 'vite-tsconfig-paths'; 7 8export default defineConfig({ 9 cacheDir: '../../node_modules/.vite/my-solid-app', 10 11 server: { 12 port: 3000, 13 }, 14 15 build: { 16 target: 'esnext', 17 }, 18 19 plugins: [ 20 viteTsConfigPaths({ 21 root: '../../', 22 }), 23 /* 24 Uncomment the following line to enable solid-devtools. 25 For more info see https://github.com/thetarnav/solid-devtools/tree/main/packages/extension#readme 26 */ 27 // devtools(), 28 solidPlugin(), 29 ], 30 31 // Uncomment this if you are using workers. 32 // worker: { 33 // plugins: [ 34 // viteTsConfigPaths({ 35 // root: '../../', 36 // }), 37 // ], 38 // }, 39 40 test: { 41 globals: true, 42 cache: { 43 dir: '../../node_modules/.vitest', 44 }, 45 environment: 'jsdom', 46 include: ['src/**/*.{test,spec}.{js,mjs,cjs,ts,mts,cts,jsx,tsx}'], 47 }, 48}); 49
apps/my-solid-app/tsconfig.json
1{ 2 "extends": "../../tsconfig.base.json", 3 "files": [], 4 "compilerOptions": { 5 "target": "ESNext", 6 "useDefineForClassFields": true, 7 "module": "ESNext", 8 "lib": ["ESNext", "DOM"], 9 "moduleResolution": "Node", 10 "jsx": "preserve", 11 "jsxImportSource": "solid-js", 12 "strict": true, 13 "resolveJsonModule": true, 14 "isolatedModules": true, 15 "esModuleInterop": true, 16 "noEmit": true, 17 "noUnusedLocals": true, 18 "noUnusedParameters": true, 19 "noImplicitReturns": true, 20 "skipLibCheck": true, 21 "types": ["vite/client", "vitest"] 22 }, 23 "include": ["src"], 24 "references": [ 25 { 26 "path": "./tsconfig.app.json" 27 }, 28 { 29 "path": "./tsconfig.spec.json" 30 } 31 ] 32} 33

You can now run nx serve my-solid-app and your Solid application can be viewed in your browser!

Create a Library

Directory Flag Behavior Changes

The command below uses the as-provided directory flag behavior, which is the default in Nx 16.8.0. If you're on an earlier version of Nx or using the derived option, omit the --directory flag. See the as-provided vs. derived documentation for more details.

Let's create a library that our Solid application is going to consume. To create a new library, install the @nx/js package and run:

nx g @nx/js:lib my-lib --directory=libs/my-lib

Once the library is created, update the following files.

Rename libs/my-lib/src/lib/my-lib.ts -> libs/my-lib/src/lib/my-lib.tsx, then edit the contents to:

libs/my-lib/src/lib/my-lib.tsx
1export function MyLibComponent(props: { name: string }) { 2 return <h1>Hello {props.name} from MyLib</h1>; 3} 4
libs/my-lib/tsconfig.json
1{ 2 "extends": "../../tsconfig.base.json", 3 "compilerOptions": { 4 "module": "commonjs", 5 "forceConsistentCasingInFileNames": true, 6 "strict": true, 7 "noImplicitOverride": true, 8 "noPropertyAccessFromIndexSignature": true, 9 "noImplicitReturns": true, 10 "noFallthroughCasesInSwitch": true, 11 "jsx": "preserve", 12 "jsxImportSource": "solid-js", 13 "types": ["vitest"] 14 }, 15 "files": [], 16 "include": [], 17 "references": [ 18 { 19 "path": "./tsconfig.lib.json" 20 }, 21 { 22 "path": "./tsconfig.spec.json" 23 } 24 ] 25} 26
apps/my-solid-app/src/App.tsx
1import type { Component } from 'solid-js'; 2import { MyLibComponent } from '@acme/my-lib'; 3 4const App: Component = () => { 5 return ( 6 <div> 7 <header> 8 <p> 9 Edit <code>src/App.tsx</code> and save to reload. 10 </p> 11 <MyLibComponent name={'there'} /> 12 <a 13 href="https://github.com/solidjs/solid" 14 target="_blank" 15 rel="noopener noreferrer" 16 > 17 Learn Solid Now 18 </a> 19 </header> 20 </div> 21 ); 22}; 23 24export default App; 25

Now when you serve your application, you'll see the content from the library being displayed.

More Documentation