jigsaw
cms
Our great sponsors
jigsaw | cms | |
---|---|---|
9 | 32 | |
2,085 | 3,343 | |
0.3% | 3.8% | |
5.8 | 9.9 | |
8 days ago | 2 days ago | |
PHP | PHP | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
jigsaw
-
Launching an Engineering Blog
I decided to choose jigsaw as I am familiar with the technologies it's built with (PHP , Tailwind for styling and Blade as template engine) as it will be easy to customize if needed besides that, it comes with decent amount of features out of the box, I barely did any customization to it, just followed the installation instructions and got started.
-
10+ Must Use Static Site Generator 2022
JigSaw
-
Documentation Package
Also if anyone knows of any third-party templates for Jigsaw, I can't find any except the default blog and docs that they have in their documentation.
-
PHP 8.1.0 Release Announcement
https://github.com/tighten/jigsaw/blob/main/src/Jigsaw.php
I also would argue that the majority of code I see in other languages is equally or worse than the example you gave.
You can write terribly in any language, Laravel included.
- CMS options
-
How I Created a Web Presence as a Web Developer
Now, as for what runs the site. It is a static site, using Jigsaw as the framework. Jigsaw uses Laravel’s blade templating. Since one of my goals this year is to learn Laravel, it was the perfect fit for my site. GitHub is where I've decided to store my repos, and Netlify watches for changes to my main branch and rebuilds my site.
cms
-
9 best Git-based CMS platforms for your next project
Statamic is one of the best flat-file CMSs. It’s built with Laravel and can be used as a headless Git-based CMS as well. The paid professional version allows you to use REST APIs and GraphQL APIs for content management and offers a GitHub integration for content storage and editorial workflows.
- Casidoo on TinaCMS
-
Ask HN: What are some well-designed websites?
Aah, that's always a controversial question, on one hand, some universal rules of usability do exist, but on the other hand, everyone's habits, taste and use cases are very different.
The most neutral definition of a "well designed" website, without any further context, could be "created in a way that helps users achieve intended goals efficiently, while keeping max number of users happy about its look".
Again, different audiences will have very different answers. Here at HN, sites like https://www.mcmaster.com/ and https://www.craigslist.org win – because HN users appreciate old look and how efficient these sites are.
https://www.apple.com/ is an industry standard of a marketing site for consumer tech. It's not universally "well designed".
Other examples of well done marketing pages: https://www.sketch.com/ ; https://statamic.com/ ; https://linear.app/ got its share of hype recently.
Other times, a website is well designed because its content is awesome and is easy to consume. See https://ciechanow.ski/ and https://www.joshwcomeau.com/
Is https://github.com/ well designed? As an amateur developers, I'd say yes.
Is https://htmx.org/ well designed? Hmm, at a glance, there's no design at all. Is no design also design? That's a rabbit hole.
P.S. I often hear my website is well-designed :-)
-
Different flavors of content management
Local CMSs are the ones that are mostly file-based (like Statamic or Astro). This means that you can edit everything locally and deploy the data. This way, our CMS is more secure, but on the downside, you have to have a local server working, and you might experience more conflicts, especially when two people will work on the same article (although Git might save you from many of those). It also means that there is a higher learning curve. A remote CMS works somewhere on a server, and most users don't care how.
-
What is your tech stack for blog websites? (not wordpress)
Statamic (PHP / Laravel)
-
WP20 and Audrey Scholars – Matt Mullenweg
I'm not in the market for a CMS but if I were I'd likely go with https://statamic.com/ if I needed to build something from scratch.
-
Go with PHP
If you're looking for a great CMS and were bitten by WordPress back in the day, you should take a look at Statamic (https://statamic.com)
It's a Laravel package and it's the best CMS I've ever used (from a dev perspective). v4 just dropped the other day
-
Software for personal website
https://statamic.com free for personal. Your welcome.
-
Opinions on using Inertia for an end-users website?
If it's for a client, I wouldn't recommend a custom solution but rather picking up something like Statamic.
-
PHP in 2023
Also, există Laravel și CMS-uri cum e Statamic care sunt next level față de PHP-ul „clasic”.
What are some alternatives?
CRUD - Build custom admin panels. Fast!
Sculpin - Sculpin — Static Site Generator
laravel-localization - Easy localization for Laravel
Laravel-Zero - A PHP framework for console artisans
Dataplater - template engine that uses HTML data-* attributes so your templates look great before rendering
cms - Multilingual PHP CMS built with Laravel and bootstrap
Cleaver - 🔥🔪 A blazing-fast static site generator using Laravel's Blade templating engine
WonderCMS - Fast and small flat file CMS (5 files). Built with PHP, JSON database.
bulma-blade-ui - A set of Laravel Blade components for the Bulma frontend framework
MODX - MODX Revolution - Content Management Framework
Statamic - The official Statamic Static Site Generator