VuePress
docsify
VuePress | docsify | |
---|---|---|
47 | 30 | |
22,670 | 28,695 | |
0.2% | 1.7% | |
2.1 | 8.1 | |
6 months ago | 4 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
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.
VuePress
-
Top 10 Vue.js libraries you should be using in 2025
VuePress is a minimalistic Vue-powered static site generator optimized for technical documentation and websites with a focus on content. It is suitable for creating documentation websites, blogs, and other content-focused projects.
- Turning Documentation into a Product: Best Practices for Success
- Fusion – a hobby OS implemented in Nim
-
Free project idea - documentation framework!
VuePress - when I searched if it's supporting what I want (conditional rendering), the first result is a bug issue opened 4 years ago, so it doesn't seem to be a good option.
-
Using links in markdown to navigate files through directories.
I'm new to IA Writer, and I'm wanting to use it to draft posts for my Vuepress site.
-
Create a Static Site using VitePress for Beautiful Help Documentation
VitePress is listed in the documents as VuePress' little brother, and it is built on top of Vite. For those that don't know Vite is a build tool that aims to provide a faster and leaner development experience for modern web projects so it might sense to pair it with a static site generator such as VitePress. One of the original problems with VuePress was that it was a Webpack app and it took a lot of time to spin up a dev server for just a simple doc. VitePress solves these problems with nearly instant server start, an on-demand compilation that only compiles the page being served, and lightning-fast HMR. Let's get started!
-
10+ Must Use Static Site Generator 2022
VuePress
- Do you use Vue for smaller static sites?
-
Getting Tailwind to Work with Elm Book
Trying to help build a design system at work in my spare time; no clue if it will go anywhere but it’s fun regardless. I asked the Elm Slack group what the equivalent of React Storybook. Specifically, I wanted a way to build a documentation website like Vuepress with the ability to host native Elm code to showcase components. They pointed me to Elm Book. While Elm Book has built-in theming capabilities, I needed CSS control over my components. While they support elm-css, I wanted the ability to use TailwindCSS. The Elm libraries haven’t kept up with Tailwind’s changes, which is fine; writing raw Tailwind CSS on Elm HTML functions is easy and co-located with the component you’re styling.
-
How to Collect Documentation Statistics in Vuepress
Vuepress is a minimalistic static site generator with a Vue-powered theming system and a default theme that has been optimized for writing technical documentation.
docsify
-
10 Must-Bookmark Open Source Projects for Developers
📂 GitHub Repository 🌐 Website
-
Alternatives to Docusaurus for product documentation
Docsify is frequently updated; the latest release was on June 24, 2023, and the most recent update was on December 17, 2023. It is MIT-licensed and has an active Discord community.
-
Cookbook for SH-Beginners. Any interest? (building one)
okay new plan, does anyone know how to do this docsify on github? i obviously am a noob on github and recently on reddit. I'd like to help where i can but my knowlegde seems to be my handycap. i could provide you a trash-mail, if you need one, but i need a PO (product owner) to manage the git... i have no clue about this yet (pages and functions and stuff)
-
Ask HN: Any Sugestions for Proceures Documentation?
The tools to author it aren't that important, frankly. Ask your audience what they're most comfortable using and try to meet them there.
If the stakeholders are technical, you have more options. If they aren't, I hope you like Google Docs or Word, because if you give them anything other than that or a PDF, they'll probably complain. At worst, yeah, write it in a long Markdown text file and use tools like pandoc to transform that into other formats as needed.
If you do need a website and you're not generating enterprise-scale amounts of content (and it sounds like you're not) try things that let you avoid needing build steps and infrastructure if at all possible, so you can iterate and deploy changes with as little friction as you can.
Tools like Docsify[1] can take a pile of Markdown files and serve a site out of them, client- or server-side, without a static build step. Depending on the org, you can get away with GitHub's default rendering of Markdown in a repo. Most static site builds for stuff your scale are overengineered instances of premature optimization.
Past those initial hurdles, the format and tools challenges are all in maintenance. How can you:
- most easily keep the content up to date
- delegate updates as the staff grows or changes
- proactively distribute updates ASAP to the people who'd most benefit from receiving them
That's going to depend a lot more on who'll contribute updates, what their technical proficiency's like, and how they prefer to communicate. It might be a shared git repo and RSS or Slack notifications if they're comfortable with those things, and it might be a Google Doc and email if they're like most non-technical stakeholders.
1: https://docsify.js.org
- Docsify.js single-page apps are indexable on Google!
- Library / CMS / framework for documentation?
-
How to Build a Personal Webpage from Scratch (In 2022)
Big fan of https://docsify.js.org since theres no need to compile your static site. A small amount of js just renders markdown.
-
Example of Support Guide for End Users
If you are searching for examples of an arbitrary Jellyfin support site, visit https://travisflix.com/help/#/support (or help.travisflix.com which redirects to the /help/ URI of the TLD) to take a look at what I have done with docsify on Github Pages.
- Show HN: Markdown as Web Page/Site
-
Phabricator replacement? | Or OpenProject alternative? | issue tracking/code
*Leantime - Competitor to OP? Updated recently, uses Docsify, no demo :(
What are some alternatives?
Docusaurus - Easy to maintain open source documentation websites.
ToolJet - Low-code platform for building business applications. Connect to databases, cloud storages, GraphQL, API endpoints, Airtable, Google sheets, OpenAI, etc and build apps using drag and drop application builder. Built using JavaScript/TypeScript. 🚀
front-matter - Extract YAML front matter from strings
nextra - Simple, powerful and flexible site generation framework with everything you love from Next.js.
gray-matter - Smarter YAML front matter parser, used by metalsmith, Gatsby, Netlify, Assemble, mapbox-gl, phenomic, vuejs vitepress, TinaCMS, Shopify Polaris, Ant Design, Astro, hashicorp, garden, slidev, saber, sourcegraph, and many others. Simple to use, and battle tested. Parses YAML by default but can also parse JSON Front Matter, Coffee Front Matter, TOML Front Matter, and has support for custom parsers. Please follow gray-matter's author: https://github.com/jonschlinkert
typedoc - Documentation generator for TypeScript projects.
Metalsmith - An extremely simple, pluggable static site generator for Node.js
MkDocs - Project documentation with Markdown.
laravel-snappy - Laravel Snappy PDF
DocPad - Empower your website frontends with layouts, meta-data, pre-processors (markdown, jade, coffeescript, etc.), partials, skeletons, file watching, querying, and an amazing plugin system. DocPad will streamline your web development process allowing you to craft powerful static sites quicker than ever before.