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Develop and build

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Once you have an Astro project, now you’re ready to build with Astro! 🚀

To make changes to your project, open your project folder in your code editor. Working in development mode with the dev server running allows you to see updates to your site as you edit the code.

You can also customize aspects of your development environment such as configuring TypeScript or installing the official Astro editor extensions.

Astro comes with a built-in development server that has everything you need for project development. The astro dev CLI command will start the local development server so that you can see your new website in action for the very first time.

Every starter template comes with a pre-configured script that will run astro dev for you. After navigating into your project directory, use your favorite package manager to run this command and start the Astro development server.

Terminal window
npm run dev

If all goes well, Astro will now be serving your project on http://localhost:4321/. Visit that link in your browser and see your new site!

Astro will listen for live file changes in your src/ directory and update your site preview as you build, so you will not need to restart the server as you make changes during development. You will always be able to see an up-to-date version of your site in your browser when the dev server is running.

When viewing your site in the browser, you’ll have access to the Astro dev toolbar. As you build, it will help you inspect your islands, spot accessibility issues, and more.

If you aren’t able to open your project in the browser after starting the dev server, go back to the terminal where you ran the dev command and check the message displayed. It should tell you if an error occurred, or if your project is being served at a different URL than http://localhost:4321/.

To check the version of your site that will be created at build time, quit the dev server (Ctrl + C) and run the appropriate build command for your package manager in your terminal:

Terminal window
npm run build

Astro will build a deploy-ready version of your site in a separate folder (dist/ by default) and you can watch its progress in the terminal. This will alert you to any build errors in your project before you deploy to production. If TypeScript is configured to strict or strictest, the build script will also check your project for type errors.

When the build is finished, run the appropriate preview command (e.g. npm run preview) in your terminal and you can view the built version of your site locally in the same browser preview window.

Note that this previews your code as it existed when the build command was last run. This is meant to give you a preview of how your site will look when it is deployed to the web. Any later changes you make to your code after building will not be reflected while you preview your site until you run the build command again.

Use (Ctrl + C) to quit the preview and run another terminal command, such as restarting the dev server to go back to working in development mode which does update as you edit to show a live preview of your code changes.

Read more about the Astro CLI and the terminal commands you will use as you build with Astro.

Success! You are now ready to start building with Astro! 🥳

Here are a few things that we recommend exploring next. You can read them in any order. You can even leave our documentation for a bit and go play in your new Astro project codebase, coming back here whenever you run into trouble or have a question.

Configure your dev environment

Section titled Configure your dev environment

Explore the guides below to customize your development experience.

Take the introductory tutorial

Section titled Take the introductory tutorial

Build a fully functional Astro blog starting from a single blank page in our introductory tutorial.

This is a great way to see how Astro works and walks you through the basics of pages, layouts, components, routing, islands, and more. It also includes an optional, beginner-friendly unit for those newer to web development concepts in general, which will guide you through installing the necessary applications on your computer, creating a GitHub account, and deploying your site.

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