Astro content
c is a perfect choice for your content-focused site: blogs, marketing sites, portfolios, and more!
Astro helps you author and present your content. You can write a blog post directly in Astro using Markdown/MDX, or fetch your content from a headless CMS. Astro lets you build a site around your content: you can add a layout to your pages, create an index of posts, and set up an RSS feed to allow readers to subscribe.
Writing Content
In Astro, you can author your content in a variety of ways:
- In Markdown files (
.md
or alternative extensions), designed to make it easy to write rich text content. - In MDX (
.mdx
) files, which let you include components and dynamic expressions in your document. - Using a third-party content management system (CMS), then pulling that content into a
.astro
page. - Other options (less commonly used for content-heavy pages) include
.astro
files and.html
files.
Markdown Authoring
Markdown is a convenient syntax for writing rich text with basic formatting and common elements like headers, lists, and images. Astro has built-in support for Markdown files in your project.
Create and write a new .md
file in your code editor or bring in an existing file written in your favorite Markdown editor. Some online Markdown editors like StackEdit and Dillinger will even allow you to edit and sync your work with your Astro repository stored on GitHub.
📚 Learn more about writing Markdown content in Astro.
MDX Authoring
If you add the MDX integration to your project, you can also write content using .mdx
files, which let you include JavaScript expressions and custom components within your Markdown. This includes both static Astro components and interactive framework components. Add UI elements such as a banner or an interactive carousel right in your text to turn your content into full-fledged web pages.
Write and edit .mdx
files directly in your code editor, alongside your project files.
📚 Learn more about using MDX with Astro.
Headless CMS Authoring
Write blog posts in your existing Content Management System (CMS) such as Storyblok, WordPress, or Contentful. Some CMSes, like Storyblok, provide an official Astro integration. Others expose a JavaScript SDK that Astro pages can use to fetch your remote content.
Managing content pages
Markdown and MDX files that live in your src/pages
directory will automatically generate pages on your site using Astro’s file-based routing, built at a URL corresponding to the post’s file path.
You can also choose to keep your Markdown and MDX files outside of the src/pages
directory, and instead import their content into .astro
pages.
If you’re writing your content in a CMS, you can fetch your posts and use dynamic routing to use one .astro
file to generate a route for each post. In Astro’s default static mode, these routes are generated at build time. If you opt-in to SSR mode, you respond to a request at runtime and fetch the content on demand.
Showcasing your content
To build common features to organize and display your content, such as a blog archive or a page for each blog tag, Astro allows you to fetch filenames and metadata from your Markdown and MDX frontmatter and use these to generate page content and routes.
Community Integrations
In addition to the official @astrojs/mdx
integration, there are several third-party community integrations for working with content in your Astro project.