ssg-cli-tool
A command-line interface SSG tool used for generating a complete HTML web site from raw data and files. (by alexsam29)
nan1-ssg
By NeilAn99
ssg-cli-tool | nan1-ssg | |
---|---|---|
13 | 11 | |
0 | 0 | |
- | - | |
10.0 | 3.7 | |
over 1 year ago | 5 months ago | |
HTML | JavaScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
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.
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.
ssg-cli-tool
Posts with mentions or reviews of ssg-cli-tool.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-11-17.
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Auto-run Tests: Test Via Continuous Integration
There was another repo I tried to add test for, and it uses the same setup as mine. It uses JavaScript and achieve CI via GitHub Action, except that it also run test for version 14.x and 16.x of Node.js. Given both repo use Jest for testing, It's pretty easy to write test for the repo. I needed to spend time to understand the code and then run test coverage and see the existing tests to see what's needed to be done.
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DPS909 Blog - Lab 8: Testing
Automated testing commit: https://github.com/alexsam29/ssg-cli-tool/commit/dff551f7690bf7caaa3db6902b934145df401853
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DPS909 Blog - Lab 7: Static Analysis Tools
For lab 7 in my open-source course (DPS909), we were asked to implement static analysis tools into our static site generator (SSG).
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DPS909 Blog - Lab 6: Full MD Support
For lab 6 in my open-source course (DPS909) we were asked to explore features of another popular static site generator (SSG) called Docusaurus. After creating our own demo website using Docusaurus, we were asked to choose one feature that we would like into our own SSG project.
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DPS909 Blog - Lab 5: Refactoring & Rewriting Git History
GitHub Repo: https://github.com/alexsam29/ssg-cli-tool Refactoring commit: https://github.com/alexsam29/ssg-cli-tool/commit/cb9bb6e4278680df99c9202ca17288703cebe885
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DPS909 Blog - Lab 4: Using Git Remotes and Merges
I had an issue that was created on my repo that wanted to add similar feature.
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Working with git remote and adding to my SSG
This week I worked with Alex to add a new feature to our SSGs. This new feature was the ability to use a JSON config file to pass in options instead of typing in the options manually in the command line. I worked on Alex's repo.
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DPS909 Blog - Lab 3: Managing Simultaneous Changes
I continued working on my Static Site Generator and decided to add two more features. I created issues for each feature that I wanted to add.
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Experience of Project Contribution
My Conbtirbution I openned an issue and made a corresponding pull request for an open source Static Site Generator project by Alexander Samaniego(alexsam29). The goal was to add support for parsing Markdown files into HTML files, while also supporting italicization for those. Of course, I needed to update the README.md to reflect the changes.
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DPS909 Blog - Lab 2: Contributing and Submitting Pull Requests
After completing release 0.1 of my static site generator and having that code reviewed by another person in lab 1. It was time to start contributing to other projects and to learn how to create PRs. In addition, it was a chance to put our code reviewing experience from lab 1 to work by reviewing other people's PRs and code changes on our own repo.
nan1-ssg
Posts with mentions or reviews of nan1-ssg.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-11-16.
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Adding CI to my SSG
This week I added CI to my SSG. I used GitHub's CI service GitHub Actions to accomplish this. It was very easy to set up as I just had to find the Node.js workflow and add it.
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Adding tests to my SSG
This week I added some testing tools to my SSG. The project now uses Jest for testing. I chose to use Jest because it is a very popular testing framework for JavaScript. I contemplated using Mocha, but after doing some research, decided Jest was easier to use out of the box. Installing Jest was easy. All I had to do was install it using npm: npm install --save-dev jest.
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Adding static analysis to my SSG
This week I added some static analysis tools to my SSG. The tools I added are Prettier and ESLint. Prettier is a code formatter to make code consistent and ESLint checks your code for any common errors/warnings.
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Copying a feature from Docusaurus into my SSG
I also chose a feature from Docusaurus to add into my own SSG. The previous version of my SSG had some basic Markdown support, so I decided to upgrade my Markdown support by using an existing open source Markdown converter.
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Refactoring my SSG repo
This week, I refactored my SSG repo to clean up my repo. Here is the commit.
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DPS909 Blog - Lab 4: Using Git Remotes and Merges
I decided to collaborate with Neil and contribute to his static site generator.
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Adding features to my SSG with multiple branches
This week, I continued to work on my SSG and I added two new features.
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OSD600 Blog #4 - Lab 2
My Filed Issue
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OSD600 Blog #3 - Lab 1
node_modules shouldn't be commited in git - In another class I took with Prof. Humphrey (CCP555), we learned about the importance of .gitignore files, and that the node_modules is a folder we should avoid committing to git.
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Creating my static site generator
This week, I created my own SSG (static site generator) called nan1-ssg using JavaScript and node.js. My SSG will generate .html files from .txt files as specified by the user.
What are some alternatives?
When comparing ssg-cli-tool and nan1-ssg you can also consider the following projects:
ssg-cli-tool - A command-line interface SSG tool used for generating a complete HTML web site from raw data and files.
StaticSiteGenerator - This repo contains the Static Site Generator for OSD600
SauSaGe - a static site generator
my-button-ssg
staticSiteCon - This takes one or more txt files and convert them into static html web pages.
ESLint - Find and fix problems in your JavaScript code.
Docusaurus - Easy to maintain open source documentation websites.
prettier - Prettier is an opinionated code formatter.
staticSiteCon - This takes one or more txt files and convert them into static html web pages.
mocha - ☕️ simple, flexible, fun javascript test framework for node.js & the browser
ssg-cli-tool vs ssg-cli-tool
nan1-ssg vs StaticSiteGenerator
ssg-cli-tool vs SauSaGe
nan1-ssg vs my-button-ssg
ssg-cli-tool vs staticSiteCon
nan1-ssg vs ESLint
ssg-cli-tool vs Docusaurus
nan1-ssg vs prettier
ssg-cli-tool vs ESLint
nan1-ssg vs Docusaurus
ssg-cli-tool vs staticSiteCon
nan1-ssg vs mocha