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README.md

Welcome to your new TanStack app!

Getting Started

To run this application:

pnpm install
pnpm start

Building For Production

To build this application for production:

pnpm build

Testing

This project uses Vitest for testing. You can run the tests with:

pnpm test

Styling

This project uses Tailwind CSS for styling.

TanStack Chat Application

An example chat application built with TanStack Start, TanStack Store, and TanStack AI (our open-source AI SDK).

.env Updates

OPENAI_API_KEY=your_openai_api_key

✨ Features

AI Capabilities

  • 🤖 Powered by TanStack AI with OpenAI GPT-4o
  • 📝 Rich markdown formatting with syntax highlighting
  • 🎯 Customizable system prompts for tailored AI behavior
  • 🔄 Real-time streaming responses with Server-Sent Events
  • 🔌 Connection adapters - flexible streaming architecture
  • 🛠️ Automatic tool execution loop - tools are executed automatically by the SDK
  • 🎸 Tool/function calling with guitar recommendations

User Experience

  • 🎨 Modern UI with Tailwind CSS and Lucide icons
  • 🔍 Conversation management and history
  • 🔐 Secure API key management
  • 📋 Markdown rendering with code highlighting

Technical Features

  • 📦 Centralized state management with TanStack Store
  • 🔌 Extensible architecture for multiple AI providers
  • 🛠️ TypeScript for type safety

Architecture

Tech Stack

  • Frontend Framework: TanStack Start
  • Routing: TanStack Router
  • State Management: TanStack Store
  • Styling: Tailwind CSS
  • AI Integration: TanStack AI with OpenAI GPT-4o
  • Chat Client: @tanstack/ai-solid with connection adapters
  • Streaming: Server-Sent Events via fetchServerSentEvents
  • Tool Execution: Automatic loop with ToolCallManager

Routing

This project uses TanStack Router. The initial setup is a file based router. Which means that the routes are managed as files in src/routes.

Adding A Route

To add a new route to your application just add another a new file in the ./src/routes directory.

TanStack will automatically generate the content of the route file for you.

Now that you have two routes you can use a Link component to navigate between them.

Adding Links

To use SPA (Single Page Application) navigation you will need to import the Link component from @tanstack/solid-router.

import { Link } from '@tanstack/solid-router'

Then anywhere in your JSX you can use it like so:

<Link to="/about">About</Link>

This will create a link that will navigate to the /about route.

More information on the Link component can be found in the Link documentation.

Using A Layout

In the File Based Routing setup the layout is located in src/routes/__root.tsx. Anything you add to the root route will appear in all the routes. The route content will appear in the JSX where you use the <Outlet /> component.

Here is an example layout that includes a header:

import { Outlet, createRootRoute } from '@tanstack/solid-router'
import { TanStackRouterDevtools } from '@tanstack/solid-router-devtools'

import { Link } from '@tanstack/solid-router'

export const Route = createRootRoute({
  component: () => (
    <>
      <header>
        <nav>
          <Link to="/">Home</Link>
          <Link to="/about">About</Link>
        </nav>
      </header>
      <Outlet />
      <TanStackRouterDevtools />
    </>
  ),
})

The <TanStackRouterDevtools /> component is not required so you can remove it if you don't want it in your layout.

More information on layouts can be found in the Layouts documentation.

Data Fetching

There are multiple ways to fetch data in your application. You can use TanStack Query to fetch data from a server. But you can also use the loader functionality built into TanStack Router to load the data for a route before it's rendered.

For example:

const peopleRoute = createRoute({
  getParentRoute: () => rootRoute,
  path: '/people',
  loader: async () => {
    const response = await fetch('https://swapi.dev/api/people')
    return response.json() as Promise<{
      results: {
        name: string
      }[]
    }>
  },
  component: () => {
    const data = peopleRoute.useLoaderData()
    return (
      <ul>
        {data.results.map((person) => (
          <li key={person.name}>{person.name}</li>
        ))}
      </ul>
    )
  },
})

Loaders simplify your data fetching logic dramatically. Check out more information in the Loader documentation.

Solid-Query

Solid-Query is an excellent addition or alternative to route loading and integrating it into you application is a breeze.

First add your dependencies:

pnpm add @tanstack/solid-query @tanstack/solid-query-devtools

Next we'll need to create a query client and provider. We recommend putting those in main.tsx.

import { QueryClient, QueryClientProvider } from '@tanstack/solid-query'

// ...

const queryClient = new QueryClient()

// ...

You can also add TanStack Query Devtools to the root route (optional).

import { SolidQueryDevtools } from '@tanstack/solid-query-devtools'

const rootRoute = createRootRoute({
  component: () => (
    <>
      <Outlet />
      <SolidQueryDevtools buttonPosition="top-right" />
      <TanStackRouterDevtools />
    </>
  ),
})

Now you can use useQuery to fetch your data.

import { useQuery } from '@tanstack/solid-query'

import './App.css'

function App() {
  const { data } = useQuery({
    queryKey: ['people'],
    queryFn: () =>
      fetch('https://swapi.dev/api/people')
        .then((res) => res.json())
        .then((data) => data.results as { name: string }[]),
    initialData: [],
  })

  return (
    <div>
      <ul>
        {data.map((person) => (
          <li key={person.name}>{person.name}</li>
        ))}
      </ul>
    </div>
  )
}

export default App

You can find out everything you need to know on how to use Solid-Query in the Solid-Query documentation.

State Management

Another common requirement for Solid applications is state management. There are many options for state management in Solid. TanStack Store provides a great starting point for your project.

First you need to add TanStack Store as a dependency:

pnpm add @tanstack/store

Now let's create a simple counter in the src/App.tsx file as a demonstration.

import { useStore } from '@tanstack/solid-store'
import { Store } from '@tanstack/store'
import './App.css'

const countStore = new Store(0)

function App() {
  const count = useStore(countStore)
  return (
    <div>
      <button onClick={() => countStore.setState((n) => n + 1)}>
        Increment - {count}
      </button>
    </div>
  )
}

export default App

One of the many nice features of TanStack Store is the ability to derive state from other state. That derived state will update when the base state updates.

Let's check this out by doubling the count using derived state.

import { useStore } from '@tanstack/solid-store'
import { Store, Derived } from '@tanstack/store'
import './App.css'

const countStore = new Store(0)

const doubledStore = new Derived({
  fn: () => countStore.state * 2,
  deps: [countStore],
})
doubledStore.mount()

function App() {
  const count = useStore(countStore)
  const doubledCount = useStore(doubledStore)

  return (
    <div>
      <button onClick={() => countStore.setState((n) => n + 1)}>
        Increment - {count}
      </button>
      <div>Doubled - {doubledCount}</div>
    </div>
  )
}

export default App

We use the Derived class to create a new store that is derived from another store. The Derived class has a mount method that will start the derived store updating.

Once we've created the derived store we can use it in the App component just like we would any other store using the useStore hook.

You can find out everything you need to know on how to use TanStack Store in the TanStack Store documentation.

Demo files

Files prefixed with demo can be safely deleted. They are there to provide a starting point for you to play around with the features you've installed.

Learn More

You can learn more about all of the offerings from TanStack in the TanStack documentation.