jekyll-feed
jekyll-sitemap
jekyll-feed | jekyll-sitemap | |
---|---|---|
8 | 1 | |
859 | 975 | |
0.3% | 0.1% | |
4.7 | 0.0 | |
6 months ago | 7 months ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
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.
jekyll-feed
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JSON Feed: An Atom/RSS feed alternative
XML feeds are often generated by templating, rather than actual XML serialisation. The official Jekyll Feed plugin has this: https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-feed/blob/master/lib/jekyll...
JSON is much more easily generated by a valid generator, and less likely to face serialisation issues.
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Style Your RSS Feed
Awesome. I was able to get this going easily enough on my jekyll-created site that uses the jekyll-feeds plugin. You just have to name the template right and it just works.
https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-feed/#custom-styling
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HELP feed.xml & robots.txt is required?
Disable Jekyll-feed plugin from _config.yml
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How much can you get out of a $4 VPS?
It looks like this [1] plugin [2] is supported in jekyll / GitHub pages [3].
So, it seems like adding RSS / Atom feeds on a jekyll or GitHub pages site is pretty straightforward.
1. https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-feed
2. https://docs.github.com/en/pages/setting-up-a-github-pages-s...
3. https://pages.github.com/versions/
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Copied and pasted me.northeastern.edu's resources to my own website to save time
Nice site! Another fellow note-taker inspired by Gilles Castel I see ;) Would you be willing to add an RSS feed to your site so people can follow it and get updates? It's been a while since I used jekyll but I think you just need to add jekyll-feed to the Gemfile and config.yml. See here
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Turbocharge your Jekyll Website
There is again an easy way out with the jekyll-feed plugin. Add the plugin, do a bundle install and the feed should start appearing at /feed.xml.
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XSLT How Do I Handle XML Escape Characters?
I was afraid of that. I was starting to think that how my Atom feed is created is not properly formed XML. I'm using this to build the feed, https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll-feed/blob/master/lib/jekyll-feed/feed.xml. See line number 66 for the content I'm talking about ({{ post.content | strip | xml_escape }}). Maybe I just can't do what I'm trying to accomplish using only XSLT. I just wanted to have the option for the user of having the summary or the full on content with HTML markup and all. BTW, the file I referenced is written with Liquid Template Language.
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I Create This Blog Using Jekyll
I have tried using the provided theme like Minima but, I just don’t like it after all. That’s why I think it’s better to create my own. I tried to create the simplest design as long as it is easy to be read. I used Coolors, Google Font, Rogue, Jekyll Paginate, Jekyll Feed, and write a bit of Ruby, CSS, and JS for creating the theme itself. I didn’t think creating this simple blog costs me 2 Saturdays, even though it only consists of as many as 3 pages.
jekyll-sitemap
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Generate an XML Sitemap for a Static Website in GitHub Actions
I use GitHub Pages for my personal website, as well as for several project sites. Although some static site generators include support for sitemap generation (e.g., Jekyll has a plugin for sitemaps), my personal website is generated by a custom static site generator that I built for a few specialized reasons, and most of my project sites for Java libraries consist of a single hand-written HTML page combined with javadoc-generated documentation. So a while back I implemented a GitHub Action, generate-sitemap, that can generate an XML sitemap by crawling a GitHub repository containing the HTML of the site. It uses the last commit date of each file to produce the tags. By default, it includes URLs for HTML and PDF files in the sitemap, and skips other file extensions in the repository. But it can be configured to include URLs corresponding to whatever file extensions you want included. It checks the head of HTML pages for noindex meta tags, and excludes such files from the sitemap, and it likewise excludes files from the sitemap if they match a Disallow rule in your robots.txt. The generate-sitemap can be configured in a few other ways as well (see the documentation in the GitHub repository for all details). The generate-sitemap action is implemented in Python as a container action.
What are some alternatives?
Feedjira - A feed parsing library
github-metadata - Jekyll plugin to propagate the `site.github` namespace and set default values for use with GitHub Pages.
vpncloud - Peer-to-peer VPN
generate-sitemap - Generate an XML sitemap for a GitHub Pages site using GitHub Actions
Feed normalizer - Extensible Ruby wrapper for Atom and RSS parsers
jekyll-gist - :page_with_curl: Liquid tag for displaying GitHub Gists in Jekyll sites.