hugo-site
remark
hugo-site | remark | |
---|---|---|
12 | 42 | |
32 | 7,224 | |
- | 1.1% | |
9.9 | 7.0 | |
about 19 hours ago | 7 days ago | |
HTML | JavaScript | |
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.
hugo-site
- Ask HN: Could you show your personal blog here?
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Hugo via npm?
This month, I took my site squarely into npm-ville when I brought in the npm version of Sass and added PostCSS to make "future" CSS work with current browsers. As it turns out, those changes made my site an unexpectedly appropriate target for the use case that Hugo Installer presents. I’m sure I’ll find nits to pick over time but, for now, I’m impressed by what I’ve seen.
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Sweeter searches with Pagefind
Fortunately, while there are limits to how much you’ll be able to improve your experience with online search in general, you can optimize your own website’s search capabilities. That’s assuming, of course, that your website is built with a static site generator (SSG), as I’ve recommended on my own website over the years, and has search capabilities in the first place. If it lacks search, you can fix that readily enough with the free Pagefind tool about which I wrote earlier this year.
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Hugo theming question
In Line 2 of the partial that I use for the search bar and results, I comment out the line of code that calls to the Pagefind CSS. (I derived it from the Pagefind documentation.) It's this step for which I can't find the corresponding code in your repo, but I'm sure you know where it is; and that's the key to this.
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Where do you post your writing?
(a.) My own site, https://www.brycewray.com --- currently hosted on Cloudflare Pages, although it's also been on other Jamstack hosts such as Netlify, Vercel, and (briefly) Render.
although I (b.) also sometimes put stuff on dev.to.
- Get good Git info from Hugo
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Webmentions on Hugo yes, JavaScript no
Thanks! I will at some point. The code — in its current, very “as-is” state — is in my repo at (as of now) https://github.com/brycewray/hugo_site/blob/main/layouts/partials/webmentions-pipes.html if you can bear its spaghetti-ness. But, assuming you mean you’ll want a walk-through explanation: yes, that’s yet to come. There are some things I need to refine, first.
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Webmentions yes, JavaScript no
When I have the code somewhat DRY-er, I’ll write about it. In the meantime, I’ve left the following comment within the webmentions-pipes partial template I’m using to suck all this into each applicable post, just in case the curious happen to find that partial on the site repo:
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Stay in the race with Hugo, Bookshop, and CloudCannon’s Git-powered CMS
By Bryce Wray
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Is Astro ready for your blog?
Having just moved my own site to Astro yesterday after a week or two of experimentation and grunt work, I can offer some opinions which may help you with that question. I’ll go through the “boxes” which I believe any SSG or other website development platform should “check” before you should give it a shot at this task, along with how I judge Astro’s ability to do so in each case.
remark
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Which software do you use to create presentations using Vim that is superior to existing ones?
I also didn't try this tool but it's called RemarkJS which is named too similar to revealjs.
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How We Started Managing BSA Delivery Processes on GitHub
remark. Primarily, this is a linter for Markdown. Additionally, thanks to its numerous plugins, it allows us to perform additional checks for grammatical mistakes within the content itself. Before using this linter, our content was not scrutinized to this extent.
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I built an Markdown editor using Next.js and TailwindCss 🔥
Rehype and Remark are plugins used to transform and manipulate the HTML and Markdown content of a website, helping to enhance its functionality and appearance.
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how to retain position of markdown element in remark.js
I usually combine remark-parse, remark-rehype and rehype-react to transform markdown into react components. The configuration of the processor is like:
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Building an Astro Blog with View Transitions
Astro content collection are as simple as a folder containing a bunch of Markdown (or Markdoc or MDX) files if that's the only thing you need, but they can also do relationship matching between different collections, frontmatter validation using zod and you can also customize how the markdown is parsed and translated to html using rehype and remark and their plugin ecosystem.
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Simple markdown plugin to open external links in a new tab
On my personal blog I have few external links in my posts. I wanted to keep people on my website by applying target="_blank" on external (those what don't reference to my site) links. This is a common and good practice too. I write my content in Markdown, so I decided to write a remark plugin. It is simple to implement, just few lines of code.
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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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How to integrate your blog with dev.to API Next.js 13
That's all to render the post as HTML, there are lots of things you can do to customize the results, you can check the remark plugins and rehype plugins to pass as props to and you can also take a look at some other bloggers if you're looking for different styles for example Lee Robinson's or if you liked mine.
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Contentlayer with next/image
contentlayer uses remark to parse the markdown in an mdast. We can now use remark plugins to modify the mdast. Then rehype comes into play and converts the mdast into a hast. rehype plugins can now modify the hast. Finally the hast is converted into react components.
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Serving Docusaurus images with Cloudinary
Now we have our Cloudinary account set up, we can use it with Docusaurus. To do so, we need to create a remark plugin. This is a plugin for the remark markdown processor. It's a plugin that will transform the markdown image syntax into a Cloudinary URL.
What are some alternatives?
golang-docker - Docker Official Image packaging for golang
marked - A markdown parser and compiler. Built for speed.
Hugo - The world’s fastest framework for building websites.
markdown-it - Markdown parser, done right. 100% CommonMark support, extensions, syntax plugins & high speed
toml - Tom's Obvious, Minimal Language
rehype - HTML processor powered by plugins part of the @unifiedjs collective
feed - A RSS, Atom and JSON Feed generator for Node.js, making content syndication simple and intuitive! 🚀
react-markdown - Markdown component for React
gray-matter - Smarter YAML front matter parser, used by metalsmith, Gatsby, Netlify, Assemble, mapbox-gl, phenomic, vuejs vitepress, TinaCMS, Shopify Polaris, Ant Design, Astro, hashicorp, garden, slidev, saber, sourcegraph, and many others. Simple to use, and battle tested. Parses YAML by default but can also parse JSON Front Matter, Coffee Front Matter, TOML Front Matter, and has support for custom parsers. Please follow gray-matter's author: https://github.com/jonschlinkert
Jekyll - :globe_with_meridians: Jekyll is a blog-aware static site generator in Ruby
micromark - small, safe, and great commonmark (optionally gfm) compliant markdown parser