lazyblorg
sftdyn
Our great sponsors
lazyblorg | sftdyn | |
---|---|---|
10 | 1 | |
391 | 240 | |
- | 2.5% | |
0.0 | 3.8 | |
30 days ago | 9 months ago | |
Python | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
lazyblorg
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Indexing and tagging files: how to do this?
Another method is used via Memacs filename module: it generates a text file with all files that start with a date- or time-stamp. This file can then be used for all sorts of workflows for retrieving files. For example, this is how I include images in my blog using lazyblorg and its "Smart tsfile Image File Search".
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Reading org files.
For my own Python tools, I wrote multiple naïve parsers myself (not following the usual lexical/syntactical parsing model from the books) in order to get something working. While my parsers are not considered general purpose parsers, they get the job done on my side. You might take a look at https://github.com/novoid/lazyblorg/blob/master/lib/orgparser.py for a dirty but fairly complex example. It's also using pypandoc as a fall-back for stuff I didn't parse on my own. It runs my static web blog generator.
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Blogging: org-publish vs ox-hugo? What's your opinion/experience on these 2?
Minimal preferred? Then lazyblorg might be an option, although it's just a works-for-me project with a few restrictions such as an empty line between different syntax elements like a paragraph and a list.
- Blogging with Org-mode for lazy people
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Question about workflow, org-id-get-create, and org-store-link.
Between the first idea and the actual start of the implementation of lazyblorg there was a time span of several years. ;-)
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How to add search feature in org exported web sites?
My website is generated by lazyblorg which is using DuckDuckGo for searches. A query looks like that:
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emacs rss feeds
Shameless plug: I blog about Emacs but since I was too lazy to implement topic-specific feeds yet, you could add my general feed to get my Emacs-related articles as well. I'm sure that decent feed aggregators are able to filter for specific topics/words.
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Best way to make a blog website with emacs org mode?
When your focus is "fast and easy creating a blog entry anywhere in my Org files" and you don't have special needs for JavaScript-foo, you might love https://github.com/novoid/lazyblorg which I built for https://karl-voit.at/
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Single-file Native-Elisp static site generator
I've seen Weblorg, which is Native Elisp, but rewrites me to create a new file for each blog-post. Then there's Lazyblorg, but it's written in python, and also searches across all your .org files, not just a single one.
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How to fake Org mode data (or shift existing dates to today) for demo purposes?
Therefore, I implemented my own (very naïve and nasty) Org parser for lazyblorg.
sftdyn
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Self hosted Dynamic DNS
https://github.com/SFTtech/sftdyn can do this alongside BIND, which in effect work as your own nameserver. Multitenancy is possible but pretty much DIY.
What are some alternatives?
Hyde - A Python Static Website Generator
nsupdate.info - Dynamic DNS service
ox-hugo - A carefully crafted Org exporter back-end for Hugo
Pytov - A programming language with logic of Python, and syntax of all languages.
elfeed - An Emacs web feeds client
deadsimple - A dependency injection library for python, aimed for the least amount of magic.
hexo-renderer-org - Hexo renderer plugin for emacs org-mode
dyndns - Small, simple, and generic dynamic DNS client
ix - Simple dotfile pre-processor with a per-file configuration and no dependencies.
Hexo - A fast, simple & powerful blog framework, powered by Node.js.
weblorg - Static Site Generator for Emacs
defblog - A web site/blog builder, implemented as a wrapper around org-project.