diff --git a/.cta.json b/.cta.json
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3938249
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.cta.json
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+{
+ "projectName": ".",
+ "mode": "file-router",
+ "typescript": true,
+ "tailwind": false,
+ "packageManager": "npm",
+ "git": true,
+ "version": 1,
+ "framework": "react-cra",
+ "chosenAddOns": []
+}
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore
index ceaea36..caa130f 100644
--- a/.gitignore
+++ b/.gitignore
@@ -1,132 +1,10 @@
-# ---> Node
-# Logs
-logs
-*.log
-npm-debug.log*
-yarn-debug.log*
-yarn-error.log*
-lerna-debug.log*
-.pnpm-debug.log*
-
-# Diagnostic reports (https://nodejs.org/api/report.html)
-report.[0-9]*.[0-9]*.[0-9]*.[0-9]*.json
-
-# Runtime data
-pids
-*.pid
-*.seed
-*.pid.lock
-
-# Directory for instrumented libs generated by jscoverage/JSCover
-lib-cov
-
-# Coverage directory used by tools like istanbul
-coverage
-*.lcov
-
-# nyc test coverage
-.nyc_output
-
-# Grunt intermediate storage (https://gruntjs.com/creating-plugins#storing-task-files)
-.grunt
-
-# Bower dependency directory (https://bower.io/)
-bower_components
-
-# node-waf configuration
-.lock-wscript
-
-# Compiled binary addons (https://nodejs.org/api/addons.html)
-build/Release
-
-# Dependency directories
-node_modules/
-jspm_packages/
-
-# Snowpack dependency directory (https://snowpack.dev/)
-web_modules/
-
-# TypeScript cache
-*.tsbuildinfo
-
-# Optional npm cache directory
-.npm
-
-# Optional eslint cache
-.eslintcache
-
-# Optional stylelint cache
-.stylelintcache
-
-# Microbundle cache
-.rpt2_cache/
-.rts2_cache_cjs/
-.rts2_cache_es/
-.rts2_cache_umd/
-
-# Optional REPL history
-.node_repl_history
-
-# Output of 'npm pack'
-*.tgz
-
-# Yarn Integrity file
-.yarn-integrity
-
-# dotenv environment variable files
-.env
-.env.development.local
-.env.test.local
-.env.production.local
-.env.local
-
-# parcel-bundler cache (https://parceljs.org/)
-.cache
-.parcel-cache
-
-# Next.js build output
-.next
-out
-
-# Nuxt.js build / generate output
-.nuxt
+node_modules
+.DS_Store
dist
-
-# Gatsby files
-.cache/
-# Comment in the public line in if your project uses Gatsby and not Next.js
-# https://nextjs.org/blog/next-9-1#public-directory-support
-# public
-
-# vuepress build output
-.vuepress/dist
-
-# vuepress v2.x temp and cache directory
-.temp
-.cache
-
-# Docusaurus cache and generated files
-.docusaurus
-
-# Serverless directories
-.serverless/
-
-# FuseBox cache
-.fusebox/
-
-# DynamoDB Local files
-.dynamodb/
-
-# TernJS port file
-.tern-port
-
-# Stores VSCode versions used for testing VSCode extensions
-.vscode-test
-
-# yarn v2
-.yarn/cache
-.yarn/unplugged
-.yarn/build-state.yml
-.yarn/install-state.gz
-.pnp.*
-
+dist-ssr
+*.local
+count.txt
+.env
+.nitro
+.tanstack
+.vscode/
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
index 550addc..64af38b 100644
--- a/README.md
+++ b/README.md
@@ -1,2 +1,290 @@
-# TTMT.WebGUI
+Welcome to your new TanStack app!
+# Getting Started
+
+To run this application:
+
+```bash
+npm install
+npm run start
+```
+
+# Building For Production
+
+To build this application for production:
+
+```bash
+npm run build
+```
+
+## Testing
+
+This project uses [Vitest](https://vitest.dev/) for testing. You can run the tests with:
+
+```bash
+npm run test
+```
+
+## Styling
+
+This project uses CSS for styling.
+
+
+
+
+## Routing
+This project uses [TanStack Router](https://tanstack.com/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/react-router`.
+
+```tsx
+import { Link } from "@tanstack/react-router";
+```
+
+Then anywhere in your JSX you can use it like so:
+
+```tsx
+About
+```
+
+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](https://tanstack.com/router/v1/docs/framework/react/api/router/linkComponent).
+
+### 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 `` component.
+
+Here is an example layout that includes a header:
+
+```tsx
+import { Outlet, createRootRoute } from '@tanstack/react-router'
+import { TanStackRouterDevtools } from '@tanstack/react-router-devtools'
+
+import { Link } from "@tanstack/react-router";
+
+export const Route = createRootRoute({
+ component: () => (
+ <>
+
+
+
+
+
+ >
+ ),
+})
+```
+
+The `` 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](https://tanstack.com/router/latest/docs/framework/react/guide/routing-concepts#layouts).
+
+
+## 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:
+
+```tsx
+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 (
+
+ {data.results.map((person) => (
+
{person.name}
+ ))}
+
+ );
+ },
+});
+```
+
+Loaders simplify your data fetching logic dramatically. Check out more information in the [Loader documentation](https://tanstack.com/router/latest/docs/framework/react/guide/data-loading#loader-parameters).
+
+### React-Query
+
+React-Query is an excellent addition or alternative to route loading and integrating it into you application is a breeze.
+
+First add your dependencies:
+
+```bash
+npm install @tanstack/react-query @tanstack/react-query-devtools
+```
+
+Next we'll need to create a query client and provider. We recommend putting those in `main.tsx`.
+
+```tsx
+import { QueryClient, QueryClientProvider } from "@tanstack/react-query";
+
+// ...
+
+const queryClient = new QueryClient();
+
+// ...
+
+if (!rootElement.innerHTML) {
+ const root = ReactDOM.createRoot(rootElement);
+
+ root.render(
+
+
+
+ );
+}
+```
+
+You can also add TanStack Query Devtools to the root route (optional).
+
+```tsx
+import { ReactQueryDevtools } from "@tanstack/react-query-devtools";
+
+const rootRoute = createRootRoute({
+ component: () => (
+ <>
+
+
+
+ >
+ ),
+});
+```
+
+Now you can use `useQuery` to fetch your data.
+
+```tsx
+import { useQuery } from "@tanstack/react-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 (
+
+
+ {data.map((person) => (
+
{person.name}
+ ))}
+
+
+ );
+}
+
+export default App;
+```
+
+You can find out everything you need to know on how to use React-Query in the [React-Query documentation](https://tanstack.com/query/latest/docs/framework/react/overview).
+
+## State Management
+
+Another common requirement for React applications is state management. There are many options for state management in React. TanStack Store provides a great starting point for your project.
+
+First you need to add TanStack Store as a dependency:
+
+```bash
+npm install @tanstack/store
+```
+
+Now let's create a simple counter in the `src/App.tsx` file as a demonstration.
+
+```tsx
+import { useStore } from "@tanstack/react-store";
+import { Store } from "@tanstack/store";
+import "./App.css";
+
+const countStore = new Store(0);
+
+function App() {
+ const count = useStore(countStore);
+ return (
+
+
+
+ );
+}
+
+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.
+
+```tsx
+import { useStore } from "@tanstack/react-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 (
+