editable-website
CraftCMS
editable-website | CraftCMS | |
---|---|---|
5 | 45 | |
1,297 | 3,166 | |
- | 0.5% | |
6.1 | 10.0 | |
about 2 months ago | 2 days ago | |
Svelte | PHP | |
MIT License | proprietary |
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.
editable-website
- Show HN: Primo – a visual CMS with Svelte blocks, a code editor, and SSG
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How to build a website without frameworks and tons of libraries
Been dedicating a ton of time to this goal lately.
I released a "SvelteKit template for building CMS-free editable websites" earlier this year and the idea has evolved since. I started out with using Postgres + MinIO for storage, but have switched entirely to SQLite. I also added an in-place image cropper, to resize and optimize images on the client side (WebP output) before uploading and storing them in SQLite. I chose Svelte because it's easy to build classic Web pages (with minimal JS overhead), and at same time implement the reactive layer (e.g. editing) on top of it (will be loaded async). However we are also evaluating the possibility to port this to a LAMP stack at some point. Oh and everything is dynamic here, no build steps involved, edits are live immediately.
Just launched my first client project using this approach:
https://trails-shop.at?editable=true (hit the red button in the bottom-right corner)
Project website: https://editable.website
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A SvelteKit template for building CMS-free editable websites
The editor payload now is loaded on demand (after you click edit), so it's truly progressively enhanced now. :)
Thank you Nils Kjellman for the patch. https://github.com/michael/editable-website/pull/8
CraftCMS
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Different flavors of content management
The most typical approach is having a CMS admin panel sit somewhere on the server; everyone with an account uses this. This is a very convenient approach, especially when working with a team. This way, many people can work on different articles simultaneously without worrying about potential conflicts or overwriting stuff. The only con is related to security - everyone can try to get inside, and if you forget to update our CMS or some user have a weak password, it can be someone outside of our team. WordPress, Drupal, CraftCMS, or Ghost are perfect examples of such CMSs.
- Show HN: Primo – a visual CMS with Svelte blocks, a code editor, and SSG
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Is Htmx Gaining in Popularity?
I checked one website in that list, it uses CraftCMS, which apparently has htmx bundled. (https://github.com/craftcms/cms/tree/main/src/web/assets/htm...)
Would be interesting to know which other CMS'es make use of htmx (and to what degree).
- Site without WordPress
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Go with PHP
PHP has a lot of top tier CMSes. IMHO bunch of them are even better than Statamic. Craft CMS (https://craftcms.com/) is a lot more mature database based CMS. Kirby (https://getkirby.com/) is better at flat-file and has a lot better admin interface. Twill (https://twillcms.com/) is better integrated in Laravel and is fully open-source. Statamic mostly feels like it's sitting besides Laravel and they call themselves Laravel based for marketing.
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Stack to build and deploy a fully functional personal blog?
You're basically looking for any CMS that supports headless mode. E.g. Strapi (https://strapi.io/, NodeJS based), CraftCMS (https://craftcms.com/, PHP based) or countless others.
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SvelteKit+ MongoDB
Craft CMS
- 09
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A mate of mine built a cool little Tottenham Database showing the history of spurs.
It's built on Craft CMS. Makes the relationships between elements (a match and a player, for example) super easy.
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Creating a CMS with React, what should I look at?
Is there a reason you aren’t using an existing CMS? There’s a lot that provide all the UI functionality you are talking about and then expose it via a API to be consumed in your front end. https://craftcms.com is one option I’ve had good success with.
What are some alternatives?
org-mode-site-template - A workflow for a complete site using the HTML publish option of Emacs Org-Mode
Wagtail - A Django content management system focused on flexibility and user experience
eureka - Lucene-based search engine for your source code
Statamic - The official Statamic Static Site Generator
kahi-ui - Straight-forward Svelte UI for the Web
Pico - Pico is a stupidly simple, blazing fast, flat file CMS.
lowtechguys
Backdrop CMS - Backdrop is a full-featured content management system that allows non-technical users to manage a wide variety of content. It can be used to create all kinds of websites including blogs, image galleries, social networks, intranets, and more.
entr - Run arbitrary commands when files change
Kirby - Kirby's core application folder
10kbclub - A curated collection of websites whose home pages do not exceed 10 KB compressed size
Grav - Modern, Crazy Fast, Ridiculously Easy and Amazingly Powerful Flat-File CMS powered by PHP, Markdown, Twig, and Symfony