> astro

Build content-focused websites with Astro — zero JS by default, islands architecture, multi-framework components, and Markdown/MDX support.

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$curl "https://skillshub.wtf/sickn33/antigravity-awesome-skills/astro?format=md"
SKILL.mdastro

Astro Web Framework

Overview

Astro is a web framework designed for content-rich websites — blogs, docs, portfolios, marketing sites, and e-commerce. Its core innovation is the Islands Architecture: by default, Astro ships zero JavaScript to the browser. Interactive components are selectively hydrated as isolated "islands." Astro supports React, Vue, Svelte, Solid, and other UI frameworks simultaneously in the same project, letting you pick the right tool per component.

When to Use This Skill

  • Use when building a blog, documentation site, marketing page, or portfolio
  • Use when performance and Core Web Vitals are the top priority
  • Use when the project is content-heavy with Markdown or MDX files
  • Use when you want SSG (static) output with optional SSR for dynamic routes
  • Use when the user asks about .astro files, Astro.props, content collections, or client: directives

How It Works

Step 1: Project Setup

npm create astro@latest my-site
cd my-site
npm install
npm run dev

Add integrations as needed:

npx astro add tailwind        # Tailwind CSS
npx astro add react           # React component support
npx astro add mdx             # MDX support
npx astro add sitemap         # Auto sitemap.xml
npx astro add vercel          # Vercel SSR adapter

Project structure:

src/
  pages/          ← File-based routing (.astro, .md, .mdx)
  layouts/        ← Reusable page shells
  components/     ← UI components (.astro, .tsx, .vue, etc.)
  content/        ← Type-safe content collections (Markdown/MDX)
  styles/         ← Global CSS
public/           ← Static assets (copied as-is)
astro.config.mjs  ← Framework config

Step 2: Astro Component Syntax

.astro files have a code fence at the top (server-only) and a template below:

---
// src/components/Card.astro
// This block runs on the server ONLY — never in the browser
interface Props {
  title: string;
  href: string;
  description: string;
}

const { title, href, description } = Astro.props;
---

<article class="card">
  <h2><a href={href}>{title}</a></h2>
  <p>{description}</p>
</article>

<style>
  /* Scoped to this component automatically */
  .card { border: 1px solid #eee; padding: 1rem; }
</style>

Step 3: File-Based Pages and Routing

src/pages/index.astro          → /
src/pages/about.astro          → /about
src/pages/blog/[slug].astro    → /blog/:slug (dynamic)
src/pages/blog/[...path].astro → /blog/* (catch-all)

Dynamic route with getStaticPaths:

---
// src/pages/blog/[slug].astro
export async function getStaticPaths() {
  const posts = await getCollection('blog');
  return posts.map(post => ({
    params: { slug: post.slug },
    props: { post },
  }));
}

const { post } = Astro.props;
const { Content } = await post.render();
---

<h1>{post.data.title}</h1>
<Content />

Step 4: Content Collections

Content collections give you type-safe access to Markdown and MDX files:

// src/content/config.ts
import { z, defineCollection } from 'astro:content';

const blog = defineCollection({
  type: 'content',
  schema: z.object({
    title: z.string(),
    date: z.coerce.date(),
    tags: z.array(z.string()).default([]),
    draft: z.boolean().default(false),
  }),
});

export const collections = { blog };
---
// src/pages/blog/index.astro
import { getCollection } from 'astro:content';

const posts = (await getCollection('blog'))
  .filter(p => !p.data.draft)
  .sort((a, b) => b.data.date.valueOf() - a.data.date.valueOf());
---

<ul>
  {posts.map(post => (
    <li>
      <a href={`/blog/${post.slug}`}>{post.data.title}</a>
      <time>{post.data.date.toLocaleDateString()}</time>
    </li>
  ))}
</ul>

Step 5: Islands — Selective Hydration

By default, UI framework components render to static HTML with no JS. Use client: directives to hydrate:

---
import Counter from '../components/Counter.tsx';  // React component
import VideoPlayer from '../components/VideoPlayer.svelte';
---

<!-- Static HTML — no JavaScript sent to browser -->
<Counter initialCount={0} />

<!-- Hydrate immediately on page load -->
<Counter initialCount={0} client:load />

<!-- Hydrate when the component scrolls into view -->
<VideoPlayer src="/demo.mp4" client:visible />

<!-- Hydrate only when browser is idle -->
<Analytics client:idle />

<!-- Hydrate only on a specific media query -->
<MobileMenu client:media="(max-width: 768px)" />

Step 6: Layouts

---
// src/layouts/BaseLayout.astro
interface Props {
  title: string;
  description?: string;
}
const { title, description = 'My Astro Site' } = Astro.props;
---

<html lang="en">
  <head>
    <meta charset="utf-8" />
    <title>{title}</title>
    <meta name="description" content={description} />
  </head>
  <body>
    <nav>...</nav>
    <main>
      <slot />  <!-- page content renders here -->
    </main>
    <footer>...</footer>
  </body>
</html>
---
// src/pages/about.astro
import BaseLayout from '../layouts/BaseLayout.astro';
---

<BaseLayout title="About Us">
  <h1>About Us</h1>
  <p>Welcome to our company...</p>
</BaseLayout>

Step 7: SSR Mode (On-Demand Rendering)

Enable SSR for dynamic pages by setting an adapter:

// astro.config.mjs
import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config';
import vercel from '@astrojs/vercel/serverless';

export default defineConfig({
  output: 'hybrid',  // 'static' | 'server' | 'hybrid'
  adapter: vercel(),
});

Opt individual pages into SSR with export const prerender = false.

Examples

Example 1: Blog with RSS Feed

// src/pages/rss.xml.ts
import rss from '@astrojs/rss';
import { getCollection } from 'astro:content';

export async function GET(context) {
  const posts = await getCollection('blog');
  return rss({
    title: 'My Blog',
    description: 'Latest posts',
    site: context.site,
    items: posts.map(post => ({
      title: post.data.title,
      pubDate: post.data.date,
      link: `/blog/${post.slug}/`,
    })),
  });
}

Example 2: API Endpoint (SSR)

// src/pages/api/subscribe.ts
import type { APIRoute } from 'astro';

export const POST: APIRoute = async ({ request }) => {
  const { email } = await request.json();

  if (!email) {
    return new Response(JSON.stringify({ error: 'Email required' }), {
      status: 400,
      headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/json' },
    });
  }

  await addToNewsletter(email);
  return new Response(JSON.stringify({ success: true }), { status: 200 });
};

Example 3: React Component as Island

// src/components/SearchBox.tsx
import { useState } from 'react';

export default function SearchBox() {
  const [query, setQuery] = useState('');
  const [results, setResults] = useState([]);

  async function search(e: React.FormEvent) {
    e.preventDefault();
    const data = await fetch(`/api/search?q=${query}`).then(r => r.json());
    setResults(data);
  }

  return (
    <form onSubmit={search}>
      <input value={query} onChange={e => setQuery(e.target.value)} />
      <button type="submit">Search</button>
      <ul>{results.map(r => <li key={r.id}>{r.title}</li>)}</ul>
    </form>
  );
}
---
import SearchBox from '../components/SearchBox.tsx';
---
<!-- Hydrated immediately — this island is interactive -->
<SearchBox client:load />

Best Practices

  • ✅ Keep most components as static .astro files — only hydrate what must be interactive
  • ✅ Use content collections for all Markdown/MDX content — you get type safety and auto-validation
  • ✅ Prefer client:visible over client:load for below-the-fold components to reduce initial JS
  • ✅ Use import.meta.env for environment variables — prefix public vars with PUBLIC_
  • ✅ Add <ViewTransitions /> from astro:transitions for smooth page navigation without a full SPA
  • ❌ Don't use client:load on every component — this defeats Astro's performance advantage
  • ❌ Don't put secrets in .astro frontmatter that gets used in client-facing templates
  • ❌ Don't skip getStaticPaths for dynamic routes in static mode — builds will fail

Security & Safety Notes

  • Frontmatter code in .astro files runs server-side only and is never exposed to the browser.
  • Use import.meta.env.PUBLIC_* only for non-sensitive values. Private env vars (no PUBLIC_ prefix) are never sent to the client.
  • When using SSR mode, validate all Astro.request inputs before database queries or API calls.
  • Sanitize any user-supplied content before rendering with set:html — it bypasses auto-escaping.

Common Pitfalls

  • Problem: JavaScript from a React/Vue component doesn't run in the browser Solution: Add a client: directive (client:load, client:visible, etc.) — without it, components render as static HTML only.

  • Problem: getStaticPaths data is stale after content updates during dev Solution: Astro's dev server watches content files — restart if changes to content/config.ts are not reflected.

  • Problem: Astro.props type is any — no autocomplete Solution: Define a Props interface or type in the frontmatter and Astro will infer it automatically.

  • Problem: CSS from a .astro component bleeds into other components Solution: Styles in .astro <style> tags are automatically scoped. Use :global() only when intentionally targeting children.

Related Skills

  • @sveltekit — When you need a full-stack framework with reactive UI (vs Astro's content focus)
  • @nextjs-app-router-patterns — When you need a React-first full-stack framework
  • @tailwind-patterns — Styling Astro sites with Tailwind CSS
  • @progressive-web-app — Adding PWA capabilities to an Astro site

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first seenMar 23, 2026
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