Creating Redirects with #Jekyll
▻http://www.marran.com/tech/creating-redirects-with-jekyll
Tags: Jekyll #statique #redirection #URL #SEO
Creating Redirects with #Jekyll
▻http://www.marran.com/tech/creating-redirects-with-jekyll
Tags: Jekyll #statique #redirection #URL #SEO
Category #pagination in #Jekyll
▻http://www.marran.com/tech/category-pagination-in-jekyll
Tags : Jekyll #statique pagination
Building the Website | Learning #Jekyll By Example
▻http://learn.andrewmunsell.com/learn/jekyll-by-example/tutorial
Prose · A Content Editor for #GitHub
▻http://prose.io/#about
Prose provides a beatifully simple content authoring environment for CMS-free websites. It’s a web-based interface for managing content on GitHub. Use it to create, edit, and delete files, and save your changes directly to GitHub. Host your website on GitHub Pages for free, or set up your own GitHub webhook server.
Prose has advanced support for #Jekyll sites and #markdown content. Prose detects markdown posts in Jekyll sites and provides syntax highlighting, a formatting toolbar, and draft previews in the site’s full layout.
Developers can configure Jekyll sites to take advantage of these and many more features that customize the content editing experience.
Son auteur est visiblement aussi celui de substance.io : ▻http://seenthis.net/messages/253567
Introducing Jekyll-hook : Run your own #GitHub Pages | Development Seed
▻http://developmentseed.org/blog/2013/05/01/introducing-jekyll-hook
For those cases where we need the simplicity of GitHub Pages’ workflow but have to host on our own infrastructure, we built Jekyll-hook. It’s an extensible server that builds #Jekyll sites on each commit to a GitHub repository, just like GitHub Pages. It provides a ton of additional flexibility, while preserving the benefits of static site generation, like needing no server-side processing to serve webpages.
Jekyll-hook is a Node.js server that receives web hook requests from GitHub.com, or a GitHub Enterprise server, generates a Jekyll site, and publishes it. The generation and publication processes are configurable with simple bash scripts.
Get Started With #GitHub Pages (Plus Bonus #Jekyll) - Anna Debenham
▻http://24ways.org/2013/get-started-with-github-pages
Github for Writers
▻http://madebyloren.com/github-for-writers
For the past three years, I’ve used GitHub for hosting code projects, discovering bleeding edge tech, and collaborating with an engineering team. And it has been simply wonderful. In fact, it’s hard to imagine coding without GitHub. I rely on GitHub every single day.
However, despite how crucial GitHub is to the developer toolbox, I’m constantly wondering why the platform is limited to just code. It’s not a stretch to imagine the usefulness of a similar platform for non-developers - authors, teachers, students - though as much as I search, I can’t seem to find one. So I’m building it myself. I’m building a GitHub for everyone else.
Ça fait trois ans que j’ai le projet de faire quelque chose comme ça dans ma pile « To Do Some Day ». Comme d’habitude avec Internet, la façon la plus efficace de développer une bonne idée est d’attendre que quelqu’un d’autre le fasse :)
On découvre au passage prose.io : ▻http://prose.io pour faciliter l’écriture de sites statiques dans github (jekyll, markdown).
Son projet se nome « Penflip » ►http://www.penflip.com
Simple, blog-aware, static sites
Second Crack (#PHP)
▻http://www.marco.org/secondcrack
Its input is simply a directory of Markdown text files, and a basic transformation script automatically renders the blog HTML from them as needed.
You can browse or download the source code on GitHub here.
Jekyll (#ruby)
►http://jekyllrb.com
Transform your plain text into static websites and blogs.
Simple
No more databases, comment moderation, or pesky updates to install—just your content.
Static
Markdown (or Textile), Liquid, HTML & CSS go in. Static sites come out ready for deployment.
Blog-aware
Permalinks, categories, pages, posts, and custom layouts are all first-class citizens here.
Hyde (#python)
▻http://hyde.github.io
Hyde is a static website generator written in python. While Hyde took life as awesome Jekyll’s evil twin, it has since been completely consumed by the dark side and has an identity of its own.
Pour mériter la mention de « blog » un site doit permettre l’interaction - si possible le trackback et au moins le commentaire. Un site statique est fort pratique, mais ce n’est pas un blog... A moins d’abandonner les commentaires à un service tiers et perdre ainsi son indépendance.
Mof, un blog c’est avant tout une suite d’articles réguliers, présentés du plus récent au plus vieux (= log, journal). Et c’est tout. Le fait qu’il y ait des commentaires ou pas n’a aucune incidence, un blog c’est pas forcément fait pour discuter, mais avant tout pour publier du contenu, dans un ordre daté.
Justement, je suis persuadé que l’essence même de la publication est la participation à une discussion - fut-elle sous-entendue... Même un blog purement statique, sans fonctionnalité de commentaires, participe à une discussion. Je déplore donc que le trackback ne soit pas plus pratiqué - le maillage des articles les enrichit mutuellement. De même, j’espère qu’un protocole tel que Salmon (►http://www.salmon-protocol.org) parviendra à redonner une unité aux discussions éclatées dans les réseaux décentralisés.
32 Static Website Generators For Your Site, Blog Or Wiki
▻https://iwantmyname.com/blog/2011/02/list-static-website-generators.html
Sometimes, all a geek needs is a quick way to generate a static site and put it up on a server or hosting service like Amazon S3 or GitHub Pages. We’ve compiled a list of static website generators that can be used for exactly this purpose:
#Blatter #Blogofile #Bonsai #Chisel #Dynamicmatic #Frank #Hobix #Hyde #ikiwiki #Jekyll #Jinja #Korma #Lanyon #Mako #Markdoc #Middleman #nanoc #Pagegen #Stacey #Tahchee #Templeet #Toto #ttree #Pelican #Poole #Pubtal #Sphinx #StaticMatic #Static #Vee #Webby #Webgen
Hu ça existe encore Templeet, excellent ! J’avais testé ça ya longtemps quand j’étais à l’IUT, ça avait l’air excellent, et j’avais l’intention de l’utiliser comme noyau pour me faire un CMS... Et puis ensuite je suis tombé dans SPIP et je n’ai plus vraiment eu le temps d’approfondir.
#Pelican 3 documentation
▻http://docs.getpelican.com
Pelican is a static site generator, written in Python.
Write your content directly (...) in reStructuredText, Markdown, or AsciiDoc formats
Includes a simple CLI tool to (re)generate your site
Easy to interface with distributed version control systems and web hooks
▻https://github.com/getpelican/pelican/blob/master/docs/report.rst
avec des plugins :
▻https://github.com/getpelican/pelican-plugins
et, comment rajouter un type de fichier :
▻http://docs.getpelican.com/en/latest/plugins.html#recipes
via @karlpro et @ametaireau
La doc Pelican en français ;-)
▻http://docs.getpelican.com/en/3.2/fr/index.html
“simple git-backed microsites” (en #ruby) :
▻https://www.petekeen.net/simple-git-backed-microsites
▻http://leeflets.com
Pour gérer des sites en une page (one pager). Très facile à installer et à utiliser...
▻http://dropplets.com
Pour faire un blog tout en drag’n’drop. C’est très limité en fonctionnalités, mais simple et agréable à utiliser...
et pour les forums, tester #nononsense, décrit ici
►http://seenthis.net/messages/218113
divers services (commerciaux) qu’on peut brancher sur un site
▻http://cloudcannon.com/tips/2014/12/12/the-ultimate-list-of-services-for-static-websites.html
(il y a une certaine contradiction dans tout ça)
Using org to Blog with #Jekyll
►http://orgmode.org/worg/org-tutorials/org-jekyll.html
Jekyll is a static web site generator written in Ruby. It can transform various text markups, using a templating language, into static html. The resulting site can be served by almost any web server without requiring additional components such as php. Jekyll is the tool used to produce Github’s pages.
This article discusses how to produce both a static site and a blog using Jekyll and org. Rather than writing a markup processor for org files, I have relied on org’s html export features to generate files that can be processed by Jekyll.
D’ailleurs après premier test c’est vraiment bien, Jekyll.
►http://seenthis.net/messages/58167
Using Jekyll and GitHub Pages for Our Site | Development Seed
►http://developmentseed.org/blog/2011/09/09/jekyll-github-pages
faire un site (statique) sur github et qui a de la gueule, c’est possible :
#GitHub pages is a set of conventions and tools that make it easy to get files from a GitHub repository onto the web. All you do is
Create a git repo with your user/org name like developmentseed.github.com.
Add some files to it like index.html and an image.
Push your changes.
Your website is now live at developmentseed.github.com.
Jekyll is, according to its wiki,
… a simple, blog aware, static site generator. It takes a template directory (representing the raw form of a website), runs it through Textile or Markdown and Liquid converters, and spits out a complete, static website suitable for serving with Apache or your favorite web server.