Join the AI Workshop and learn to build real-world apps with AI. A hands-on, practical program to level up your skills.
One thing I really like about Astro is the frontmatter.
We can put any JavaScript in there, and one of the most useful things we can do is to fetch data at build time.
We do so using fetch(), the Fetch API.
The nice thing about Astro is that it makes it possible to use top-level await in the frontmatter, so we don’t have to do anything fancy like an IIFE or calling an async function in order to use fetch(), which is a promise-based API.
In other words, you can use await directly:
---
const res = await fetch('https://api.sampleapis.com/coffee/hot')
const data = await res.json()
---
<ul>
{data.map(item => (
<li>{item.title}</li>
))}
</ul>
It’s worth mentioning again that this network request is made at build time, so it’s done just once when the site is deployed.
And of course when it’s deployed again.
So anytime we make a change to the API, if you want the site to show the new data, you have to trigger a rebuild, which is something all platforms offer via webhooks.