gray-matter
Docusaurus
Our great sponsors
gray-matter | Docusaurus | |
---|---|---|
17 | 282 | |
3,775 | 52,824 | |
- | 2.3% | |
1.2 | 9.5 | |
16 days ago | 4 days ago | |
JavaScript | 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.
gray-matter
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Building a flat-file CMS with Angular
Writing in markdown is super convenient, and supported by just about any text editor. To convert these .md files to browser-ready HTML, I wrote a simple little Node.js script using two great npm packages called gray-matter and showdown.
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Eleventy vs. Next.js for static site generation
Next, install gray-matter to extract metadata from the front matter of markdown files, and marked to convert the markdown files to HTML:
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Exploring the code behind Docusaurus
It turns out that Docusaurus uses an open source JavaScript parser called gray-matter to parse the front matter from markdown files! After installing gray-matter using npm and them importing it into the markdownUtils.ts file, all it takes is calling the matter method and passing the markdown file contents to get returned an Object with data and content (the data being the front matter and the content being the rest of the markdown file contents).
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Create an Interactive Table of Contents for a Next.js Blog with Remark
Although we are building a custom table of contents, we won't have to write everything from scratch. To separate the Markdown/MDX content from the front matter, we'll use the Gray-matter package. It is optional in case you don't have front matter in your Markdown files. To process the Markdown itself, we'll use the Remark package. We'll also need the unist-util-visit package for traversing node trees and mdast-util-to-string for getting the text content of a node.
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Create your own blog with MDX and NextJS
In this article we walk you through the process of creating a simple blog app using the popular React framework NextJS, gray-matter and next-mdx-remote.
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NextJS 13 Blog Starter
In order to get post information (such as author, title, date, etc.) from our HTML without having them be apart of our rendered post we need a way to parse YAML front matter, this is where gray-matter comes in hand.
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Loading local markdown blog posts - part 12
To do this, we use the matter npm package.
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Create a Markdown Editor with Rust and React
It’s actually not part of the CommonMark spec, so you’ll often need a 3rd party library to parse it out on top of your Markdown parser. In JavaScript we use gray-matter which converts frontmatter into a JS object we can more easily use.
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Turn a Markdown blog to a simple SSG
Over the past few weeks, I mostly wrote on how to template a Node.js application with EJS using Express. Then, I wrote an article showing how to create a Markdown blog in Node.js using EJS, Express, gray-matter and markdown-it. Today, I'll combine those tutorials to turn the Markdown blog, from the last tutorial, into a simple SSG.
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Markdown blog with EJS
gray-matter, to parse the front matter from the Markdown files
Docusaurus
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Alternatives to Docusaurus for product documentation
Docusaurus is a popular open-source documentation tool primarily designed for product documentation and other technical documentation needs. It was first released in 2017 by Facebook Open Source (now Meta Open Source). Just recently, Docsaurus version 3.0 was released.
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Docusaurus doesn't recognize brackets {} on the markdown files
// @ts-check // `@type` JSDoc annotations allow editor autocompletion and type checking // (when paired with `@ts-check`). // There are various equivalent ways to declare your Docusaurus config. // See: https://docusaurus.io/docs/api/docusaurus-config import { themes as prismThemes } from "prism-react-renderer"; /** @type {import('@docusaurus/types').Config} */ const config = { title: "My Site", tagline: "Dinosaurs are cool", url: "https://your-docusaurus-test-site.com", baseUrl: "/", onBrokenLinks: "throw", onBrokenMarkdownLinks: "warn", favicon: "img/favicon.ico", organizationName: "facebook", // Usually your GitHub org/user name. projectName: "docusaurus", // Usually your repo name. presets: [ [ "docusaurus-preset-openapi", /** @type {import('docusaurus-preset-openapi').Options} */ ({ docs: { sidebarPath: require.resolve("./sidebars.js"), // Please change this to your repo. editUrl: "https://github.com/facebook/docusaurus/tree/main/packages/create-docusaurus/templates/shared/", }, blog: { showReadingTime: true, // Please change this to your repo. editUrl: "https://github.com/facebook/docusaurus/tree/main/packages/create-docusaurus/templates/shared/", }, theme: { customCss: require.resolve("./src/css/custom.css"), }, }), ], ], themeConfig: /** @type {import('docusaurus-preset-openapi').ThemeConfig} */ ({ navbar: { title: "My Site", logo: { alt: "My Site Logo", src: "img/logo.svg", }, items: [ { type: "doc", docId: "intro", position: "left", label: "Tutorial", }, { to: "/api", label: "API", position: "left" }, { to: "/blog", label: "Blog", position: "left" }, { href: "https://github.com/facebook/docusaurus", label: "GitHub", position: "right", }, ], }, footer: { style: "dark", links: [ { title: "Docs", items: [ { label: "Tutorial", to: "/docs/intro", }, ], }, { title: "Community", items: [ { label: "Stack Overflow", href: "https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/docusaurus", }, { label: "Discord", href: "https://discordapp.com/invite/docusaurus", }, { label: "Twitter", href: "https://twitter.com/docusaurus", }, ], }, { title: "More", items: [ { label: "Blog", to: "/blog", }, { label: "GitHub", href: "https://github.com/facebook/docusaurus", }, ], }, ], copyright: `Copyright © ${new Date().getFullYear()} My Project, Inc. Built with Docusaurus.`, }, prism: { theme: prismThemes.github, darkTheme: prismThemes.dracula, }, }), }; export default config;
- Looking for open source documentation generator
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Show HN: A Python-based static site generator using Jinja templates
Facebook's React/Markdown SSG docusaurus does those things: https://docusaurus.io/
Though you may have to use a plugin for responsive images: https://docusaurus.io/docs/api/plugins/@docusaurus/plugin-id...
- Craft Your GitHub Profile Page in 60 Seconds with Zero Code, Absolutely Free
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Top 5 Open-Source Documentation Development Platforms of 2024
Docusaurus is an open-source static site generator built on React and has emerged as a popular tool for developing and maintaining product documentation. Its ease of use, extensive features, and robust community support make it a compelling choice for many organizations.
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No CMS? Writing Our Blog in React
Wondering why Docusaurus (https://docusaurus.io) did not match their needs. Works perfectly fine as a blogging engine for our tech blog.
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Best Software Documentation Tools
This is developed by Meta. You can create really nice-looking documentation websites super fast.
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Can Git or any other VCS be used as a database instead of SQL/NoSQL ones? Have you ever seen such a thing?
Docusaurus, a documentation tool by Facebook, hosts a showcase of other websites that use Docusaurus on their Homepage. The list of websites of this showcase is a typescript files that is maintained by Docusaurus devs, and that you can add your website to through PR: https://github.com/facebook/docusaurus/blob/main/website/src/data/users.tsx
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Community project: PreventRansomware.io
Fix "Edit this page" links at the bottom of each doc (Problem with the Docusaurus build I guess)
What are some alternatives?
front-matter - Extract YAML front matter from strings
nextra - Simple, powerful and flexible site generation framework with everything you love from Next.js.
react-markdown - Markdown component for React
storybook - Storybook is a frontend workshop for building UI components and pages in isolation. Made for UI development, testing, and documentation.
remark - markdown processor powered by plugins part of the @unifiedjs collective
oauth2-proxy - A reverse proxy that provides authentication with Google, Azure, OpenID Connect and many more identity providers.
TypeScript - TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.
JSDoc - An API documentation generator for JavaScript.
docsify - 🃏 A magical documentation site generator.
VuePress - 📝 Minimalistic Vue-powered static site generator
next-markdown-blog - A lightly opinionated, full-featured Next.js blog managed through Git Workflows with markdown files.
MkDocs - Project documentation with Markdown.