Replaces the prepend/flushSync/scrollBy gymnastics with placeholder divs
sized by each page's width/height. Document height is correct from the
first paint, so resume + backward scroll just work — no scroll
compensation, no gesture fights, no forced aspect ratio distorting images.
- New /api/chapters/[id]/meta returns the dim skeleton for any chapter.
- Chapter page pre-fetches the starting chapter's meta server-side and
parallelizes the two Prisma queries via Promise.all.
- Reader renders placeholders with aspectRatio: w/h, lazy-loads image
URLs in batches via IntersectionObserver, and prefetches the next
chapter's meta ~3 pages from the end.
- Scroll tracker walks only the intersecting-pages set (~3–5 elements)
instead of every loaded page per rAF.
- scroll={false} on all Links into the reader + { scroll: false } on
double-tap router.push, plus a belt-and-suspenders rAF re-scroll, so
resume survives soft navigation and browser scroll-restoration.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
This is a Next.js project bootstrapped with create-next-app.
Getting Started
First, run the development server:
npm run dev
# or
yarn dev
# or
pnpm dev
# or
bun dev
Open http://localhost:3000 with your browser to see the result.
You can start editing the page by modifying app/page.tsx. The page auto-updates as you edit the file.
This project uses next/font to automatically optimize and load Geist, a new font family for Vercel.
Learn More
To learn more about Next.js, take a look at the following resources:
- Next.js Documentation - learn about Next.js features and API.
- Learn Next.js - an interactive Next.js tutorial.
You can check out the Next.js GitHub repository - your feedback and contributions are welcome!
Deploy on Vercel
The easiest way to deploy your Next.js app is to use the Vercel Platform from the creators of Next.js.
Check out our Next.js deployment documentation for more details.
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