piper
ursus
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
piper
-
Ask HN: What's the simplest static website generator?
Hugo without a theme and some simple CSS could do that.
Feel free to clone this repo: https://github.com/cpach/piper
- Ask HN: What is your blogging stack?
-
Ask HN: What's the best place to park my inactive domains?
I would create a static site with Hugo, host the repo on GitHub and then publish it using AWS Amplify. You will probably not go over Amazon’s free tier.
If you want to quickly create a barebones Hugo site, feel free to clone this repo: https://github.com/cpach/piper
AWS Amplify is very convenient to set up.
-
Ask HN: Care to share your personal site?
My site is here: https://hsm.tunnel53.net/
If you want to try Hugo out, feel free to clone this repo: https://github.com/cpach/piper – It’s a very simple skeleton and you don’t even need a theme for it.
For hosting I warmly recommend AWS Amplify + GitHub.
-
Ask HN: Simple(st) Static Site Generator?
I find Hugo very easy to work with.
Here’s my demo site: https://github.com/cpach/piper
Only about ~30 lines of markup is needed to create a site. No theme required.
Hosting is very easy on AWS Amplify. I hear Netlify is good too.
ursus
-
Ask HN: What Python automation scripts do you reuse frequently at work?
It’s my own SSG: https://github.com/nicbou/ursus/. I edit text for a living so the effort was worth it.
As for organisation, they are usually in the ./scripts directory of their respective projects. Generic ones are in my dotfiles: https://github.com/nicbou/dotfiles
-
Using AsciiDoc and Asciidoctor for Blogging
Ursus too! It would be fairly trivial. I just prefer Markdown though. I edit content for a living and Markdown is rock-solid.
https://github.com/nicbou/ursus
-
Ask HN: What is your blogging stack?
I run a content website for a living, and I have a personal blog.
Both are built with Ursus, a static site generator I created from scratch.
https://github.com/nicbou/ursus/
It has been rock solid since January. I wrote about my use case and why I solved it this way:
https://nicolasbouliane.com/projects/ursus
The general idea (generating a website from content + templates) is fantastic, especially if you do it all day long. Text files are much easier to work with than database records.
-
The theory versus the practice of “static websites”
It's on https://github.com/nicbou/ursus. A slightly older version is on pypi. It's been running for a few months now, but only for two websites.
What are some alternatives?
tumblelog - A static tumblelog generator available as both a Perl and Python version
rose - a template for putting together super simple webpages
maze - Susam's Maze • Main website: https://susam.in/maze/ • Mirror: https://susam.github.io/maze/
alexmingoia.com
homepage-2021 - The 2021 iteration of my homepage
shite - simple static html page generator in posix shell.
gutenberg - A fast static site generator in a single binary with everything built-in. https://www.getzola.org
KeenWrite
pandoc - Universal markup converter
decap-cms - A Git-based CMS for Static Site Generators
sitepress - Sitepress ruby gems