devportal
Asciidoctor
Our great sponsors
devportal | Asciidoctor | |
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3 | 34 | |
59 | 4,638 | |
- | 1.6% | |
9.5 | 8.9 | |
3 months ago | 20 days ago | |
PLpgSQL | Ruby | |
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 | MIT License |
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.
devportal
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Migrating to Docusaurus
Hello folks, I am running a tech writing team (along with product management). I am not expert in documentation platforms. Today we have a challenging custom-built documentation platform based on Sphinx and a bunch of cobbled together technologies aiven/devportal: Resources for users of the projects on the Aiven platform (github.com) . Our documentation is in .rst markup language due to the Python focus.
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Markdown, Asciidoc, or reStructuredText - a tale of docs-as-code
Humble brag that the last one in the list (Aiven 🦀) won 2022 DevPortal Awards in the category Best DevPortal Beyond REST Platforms. If I added a list of great docs websites but didn't include the OG, it would be a crime. Check out one of THE BEST documentation out there - Stripe Docs, built using Markdoc.
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Automatically Open Pull Requests with GitHub Actions
You can find a list of Aiven's cloud providers on [Developer.aiven.io], which is also the portal where we host the developer documentation. To quickly retrieve a list of currently-available cloud providers, my colleague Lorna Mitchell wrote a Python script that pulls our cloud listing from the Aiven API and generates documentation, which is really cool!
Asciidoctor
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I don't always use LaTeX, but when I do, I compile to HTML (2013)
You have also AsciiDoctor ( https://asciidoctor.org/ ) which is alive and well. I am using it for technical CS documentation internally, but only for single page documents. I did not try to deploy their whole multi-document setup called Antora ( https://antora.org/ ).
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[DEV][App Release] Markor 2.11 adds AsciiDoc and CSV Support
AsciiDoc File support. ( #1876, #808, #2022)
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Good software/SaaS for Technical Documentation CMS
If Maths is important to you, take a look at Asciidoc - https://asciidoctor.org/
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Documentation generators and custom syntax highlighting
I use Asciidoctor, highlightjs, a custom highlight.js language definition and that bash script:
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I wish Asciidoc was more popular
AsciiDoc is so close to being good. It slam dunks Markdown, but they just have a few nagging issues that they refuse to fix, for 9 years now:
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Markdown, Asciidoc, or reStructuredText - a tale of docs-as-code
Asciidoctor is a Ruby-based text processor for parsing AsciiDoc into a document model and converting it to HTML5, PDF, EPUB3, and other formats. Built-in converters for HTML5, DocBook5, and man pages are available in Asciidoctor. Asciidoctor has an out-of-the-box default stylesheet and built-in integrations for MathJax (display beautiful math in your browser), highlight.js, Rouge, and Pygments (syntax highlighting), as well as Font Awesome (for icons). Although Asciidoctor is written in Ruby, that does not mean you need to know Ruby to use it. Asciidoctor can be executed on a JVM using AsciidoctorJ or in any JavaScript environment (including the browser) using Asciidoctor.js. You can choose any one of three Asciidoctor processors (Ruby, JavaScript, Java/JVM) and get the same experience. You can also use the Asciidoctor Maven Plugin to convert your Asciidoc documentation using Asciidoctor from an Apache Maven build.
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Designing Go Libraries: The Talk: The Article
asciidoctor for writing
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Docs as code vs a tool that can work with .md and xml?
If you're looking at AsciiDoc, you'll want to look at Asciidoctor: https://asciidoctor.org/
- Diving deeper into custom PDF and ePub generation
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Mau: a lightweight markup language based on Jinja
The third system that I found was AsciiDoc, which started as a Python project, abandoned for a while and eventually resurrected by Dan Allen with Asciidoctor. AsciiDoc has a lot of features and I consider it superior to Markdown, but Asciidoctor is a Ruby program, and this made it difficult for me to use it. In addition, the standard output of Asciidoctor is a nice single HTML page but again customising it is a pain. I eventually created the site of the book using it, but adding my Google Analytics code and a sitemap.xml to the HTML wasn't trivial, not to mention customising the look of elements such as admonitions.
What are some alternatives?
markdown-live-preview - markdown editor with live preview
RDoc - RDoc produces HTML and online documentation for Ruby projects.
pandoc-action-example - using the pandoc document converter on GitHub Actions
Zettlr - Your One-Stop Publication Workbench
antora
plantuml - Generate diagrams from textual description
Docusaurus - Easy to maintain open source documentation websites.
ansible-doc-generator - CLI for documenting Ansible roles into Markdown files.
create-pull-request - A GitHub action to create a pull request for changes to your repository in the actions workspace
GitHub Changelog Generator - Automatically generate change log from your tags, issues, labels and pull requests on GitHub.
jekyll-multiple-languages-plugin - I18n support for Jekyll and Octopress
hugo-PaperMod - A fast, clean, responsive Hugo theme.