file-attachment-element
lume
file-attachment-element | lume | |
---|---|---|
1 | 14 | |
121 | 1,980 | |
0.0% | 1.5% | |
3.8 | 9.7 | |
2 months ago | 5 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | 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.
file-attachment-element
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5 Github Elements you have to try
Repository Demo Page
lume
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Show HN: Lume – OS Lightweight CLI/API for macOS/Linux VMs on Apple Silicon
not really stoked about the name since there are a couple other projects named lume:
- https://lume.land/
The project looks cool though
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Rewriting my blog in plain HTML
Most of them bend to your will very easily if you are the one writing the HTML and not trying to use an existing template/theme. Even Jekyll the "themes" are optional and you can entirely ignore them.
Also most of the complexity disappears if you aren't trying to make a blog. They generally all have "simple pages" support that is much simpler than trying to figure out their blog mechanics.
Of course the hard part is picking an SSG you like, and it is easier to just build your own which is a big part of why SSG proliferation happens. Too many options? Make a new one.
My main sites are still in Jekyll for now, for historic reasons of GitHub Pages support.
My latest discovery and new love in this space is Lume [0]. It's definitely on the simpler side of the scale. I haven't tried it for a full blog yet, but the simple website I have built with it has indeed continued to feel simple throughout the process and even using some of the features Lume's documentation labels "Advanced".
[0] https://lume.land/
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Node.js vs. Deno vs. Bun: JavaScript runtime comparison
Deno also has a tooling ecosystem around it to enable developers to jumpstart their projects. Fresh is a web framework built for Deno and Lume is their static site generator.
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A tool to convert text and pdf files to HTML
Agreed, it really does need to be sorted out. I guess for me, what would happen if someone created a wrapper around Pandoc in NodeJS and published it to NPM... would that package need to inherit the GPL licence? I'd say yes otherwise the very purpose of GPL is undermined and closed-source projects could bypass the licence terms with ease. Now let's say that someone creates a Lume plugin that imports that NPM package so users can convert their assets at build time into more permanent versions, like DOCX to PDF. Should this plugin inherit the package's GPL licence? Now let's say someone uses that Lume plugin in their site. Does that site then need to inherit the plugin's GPL licence? Ambiguity in the first instance creates a chain of ambiguity down the line. This kind of thing is so prevalent on NPM too, just search for git wrappers. Git doesn't even have a runtime exception like GCC does.
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What react framework do you guys suggest to create a Blog?
Try lume (https://lume.land/)
- Lume: A Deno based static site generator
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Looking for a minimal static site generator
My vote goes to https://lume.land
- Lume: The static site generator for Deno
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lume land code highlight setting
lume.land is my most favorite static site generator, but I was not able to figure out how to use code_highlight plugin.
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Lume, which is the simplest static site generator for Deno
$ mkdir lume-example $ cd lume-example $ lume init Use Typescript for the configuration file? [y/N] y How do you want to import lume? Type a number: 1 import lume from "lume/mod.ts" 2 import lume from "https://deno.land/x/lume/mod.ts" 3 import lume from "https:/deno.land/x/[email protected]/mod.ts" [1] Do you want to import plugins? Type the plugins you want to use separated by comma. All available options: - attributes https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/attributes/ - base_path https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/base_path/ - bundler https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/bundler/ - code_highlight https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/code_highlight/ - date https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/date/ - eta https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/eta/ - inline https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/inline/ - jsx https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/jsx/ - liquid https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/liquid/ - modify_urls https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/modify_urls/ - on_demand https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/on_demand/ - postcss https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/postcss/ - pug https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/pug/ - relative_urls https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/relative_urls/ - resolve_urls https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/resolve_urls/ - slugify_urls https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/slugify_urls/ - svgo https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/svgo/ - terser https://lumeland.github.io/plugins/terser/ Example: postcss, terser, base_path Created a config file _config.ts Do you want to configure VS Code? [y/N] y VS Code configured
What are some alternatives?
lume - GPU-powered 3D HTML. ✨🧊 <lume-box size="1 2 3">
deno-tutorial - :sauropod: 长期更新的《Deno 钻研之术》!循序渐进学 Deno & 先易后难补 Node & 面向未来的 Deno Web 应用开发