What we’re about
The Meetup group for Next.js Israel community.
In this group we will have meetings around the tech surrounding NextJS, including React, SSR, SSG, JamStack, etc.
Upcoming events (1)
See all- Frontend Testing Strategies & CRUD Optimization: Navigating Modern Web DevAxonius, Tel Aviv-Yafo
Hello Nexters!
Join us for our 6th meetup, October 29th hosted by Axonius.
🎤 Next.js CRUD Simplified: From Server Actions & Prisma to Remult In this live coding session, we’ll start by building a CRUD application using Next.js, Server Actions, and Prisma, exploring key patterns to optimize your workflow. Then, we’ll replace Server Actions and Prisma with Remult, an open-source CRUD-focused library, to showcase just how much time and code can be saved without sacrificing functionality. By the end of this session, you'll have the tools to easily develop a fully functional CRUD app with Next.js and Remult.
👨💻 Noam Honig is a Coder, open-sourcerer, developer experience enthusiast, software architect, and entrepreneur. At work, I oversee and consult in enterprise legacy systems modernization for fortune 500s to small businesses. Outside work I love helping NGOs as a full-stack developer and mentor.
🎤 Faking our way to quality: environment faking in frontend tests
Most frontend codebases, if they choose to test at all, choose unit and E2E tests as their primary testing mechanism. But unit tests prove to be brittle and do not inspire confidence, while E2E are slow, flaky, and difficult to write.
This talk introduces a middle alternative - tests that are fast, not flaky, mostly easy to write, and give confidence in the existing code. They do this by testing each page or dialog of the frontend on their own, faking the backend, and using Playwright to tie it all up.
This talk will discuss the solution we came up with, the journey to it, and the various approaches we discarded along the way.👨💻 Gil Tayar: 35 years of experience have not dulled the fascination Gil Tayar has with software development. His passion is distributed systems and figuring out how to scale development to big teams. Extreme modularity and testing are the main tools in his toolbelt, using them to combat the code spaghetti monster as a software architect at companies like Wix, Applitools, and at his current job as software engineer at Microsoft.
In his private life, he is a dad to two lovely kids, an avid reader of Science Fiction, and a passionate film buff. Unfortunately for him, he hasn’t answered the big question of his life—what’s better, static or dynamic languages? But he’s working on it.