soupault
templ
soupault | templ | |
---|---|---|
15 | 33 | |
361 | 6,514 | |
1.9% | - | |
8.1 | 9.6 | |
13 days ago | 3 days ago | |
OCaml | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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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.
soupault
- Soupault: A static website management tool
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LuaX: A Lua Dialect with JSX
I think this is a solid choice if you want both template engine and plugin system. I wish someday https://soupault.app adopt this.
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Is Highlight.js Harmful for Your Site?
Personally I favor Soupault <http://soupault.app/> where I can choose whatever or as many syntax highlighters as I wish. I hope to get a tree-sitter based option up soon enough, but Prism covers a lot of obscure languages (and without the parse errors Pygments has for Nix).
- Soupault – static website generator that works with HTML element trees
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Maybe is a silly question. People often use libraries like React to build their pages in neocities?
I use Soupault myself, just because it's the first Static Site Generator I stumbled upon.
- Ask HN: Any blog platforms with support for Org files?
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Rewriting my blog in Rust for fun and profit
Have you come across Soupault yet?
I'm considering using Pandoc with Soupault to my website markup agnostic by being dependent on Pandoc. Soupault can act as a HTML processor although I'm not sure if that's enough to not need a template langauge. Or maybe I'm mistaken about Soupault.
https://soupault.app/
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Ask HN: What are you using for static site management these days?
This was on HN awhile back. It sounds like what you are looking for: https://soupault.app
- Soupault (soup-oh) is a tool that helps you create and manage static websites
templ
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🤓 My top 3 Go packages that I wish I'd known about earlier
✨ In recent months, I have been developing web projects using GOTTHA stack: Go + Templ + Tailwind CSS + htmx + Alpine.js. As soon as I'm ready to talk about all the subtleties and pitfalls, I'll post it on my social networks.
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Go + Hypermedia - A Learning Journey (Part 1)
Templ - HTML templating for Go
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Go Beyond the Basics: Mastering Toast Notifications with Go and HTMX
html/template - we will be using the standard HTML templating library built into Go. It is a great library and perfect for simple things like this, though if you have a more complicated project (I assume you do), I would look into using something like templ.
- Templ – Build HTML with Go
- Show HN: CPU Prices on eBay
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LuaX: A Lua Dialect with JSX
Cool project and if it works for you and you're happy, that's all what counts.
When I read the article, I was thinking that Go templates were used wrong. I was thinking there must be a way to define the template so you inject the content and don't need to define the start and the end of the html, but instead yield a block of other html as some kind of argument. I was trying to look it up, but couldn't find documentation on this. Maybe the author is right and I'm wrong.
And I was wondering why the author isn't using something like Templ [0], which is kind of JSX with Go as hosting language. Probably because it needs the preprocessor / compile step?
[0] https://github.com/a-h/templ
- Templ: A language for writing HTML user interfaces in Go
What are some alternatives?
otoml - TOML parsing, manipulation, and pretty-printing library for OCaml (fully 1.0.0-compliant)
go-htmx-examples - go-htmx-examples
lambdasoup - Functional HTML scraping and rewriting with CSS in OCaml
quicktemplate - Fast, powerful, yet easy to use template engine for Go. Optimized for speed, zero memory allocations in hot paths. Up to 20x faster than html/template
lua-ml - An embeddable Lua 2.5 interpreter implemented in OCaml
pongo2 - Django-syntax like template-engine for Go
moonsmith - A random generator of Lua programs
bass - a low fidelity scripting language for project infrastructure
Hugo - The world’s fastest framework for building websites.
gomponents - View components in pure Go, that render to HTML 5.
ocaml-tsort - Easy to use and user-friendly topological sort module for OCaml
mustache - The mustache template language in Go