SSR stands for Server-Side Rendering. It is a technique used to render web pages on the server side instead of the client side. This allows for faster loading times and better SEO performance, as the content is already available on the server before it is sent to the user's browser. SSR is often used in JavaScript applications, where the HTML is generated on the server and then sent to the client.
Exploring Server Side Rendering
React Advanced 2025React Advanced 2025
179 min
Exploring Server Side Rendering
Workshop
Krasimir Tsonev
Krasimir Tsonev
Server-side rendering (SSR) is back in the spotlight – and React is evolving fast. In this workshop, we’ll go deep into the mechanics, performance trade-offs, and modern techniques of SSR with React.js. You'll start by building an SSR app from scratch – no frameworks, just raw renderToString and hydrateRoot—to truly understand how React renders on the server and hydrates on the client. From there, we'll upgrade to React 18’s streaming capabilities using renderToPipeableStream, implement selective hydration using Suspense, and integrate data fetching directly into the server render cycle. We’ll look at React Server Components (RSC), showing how they complement SSR. We'll also cover hydration strategies, how to prevent mismatches, and how to cache or stream HTML effectively for real-world performance. Finally, we’ll bridge our manual SSR work into production frameworks like Next.js.
Developing Dynamic Blogs with SvelteKit & Storyblok: A Hands-on Workshop
JSNation 2023JSNation 2023
174 min
Developing Dynamic Blogs with SvelteKit & Storyblok: A Hands-on Workshop
Top Content
WorkshopFree
Alba Silvente Fuentes
Roberto Butti
2 authors
This SvelteKit workshop explores the integration of 3rd party services, such as Storyblok, in a SvelteKit project. Participants will learn how to create a SvelteKit project, leverage Svelte components, and connect to external APIs. The workshop covers important concepts including SSR, CSR, static site generation, and deploying the application using adapters. By the end of the workshop, attendees will have a solid understanding of building SvelteKit applications with API integrations and be prepared for deployment.