- static-page-generators VS karl.berlin
- static-page-generators VS utterson
- static-page-generators VS naif-blog-engine
- static-page-generators VS askiiart
- static-page-generators VS xml2
- static-page-generators VS minblog
- static-page-generators VS shite
- static-page-generators VS just
- static-page-generators VS Middleman
- static-page-generators VS pages-gem
Static-page-generators Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to static-page-generators
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pages-gem
A simple Ruby Gem to bootstrap dependencies for setting up and maintaining a local Jekyll environment in sync with GitHub Pages
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CodeRabbit
CodeRabbit: AI Code Reviews for Developers. Revolutionize your code reviews with AI. CodeRabbit offers PR summaries, code walkthroughs, 1-click suggestions, and AST-based analysis. Boost productivity and code quality across all major languages with each PR.
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karl.berlin
My blog and homepage at karl.berlin, as well as the minimal blog engine used to create the pages.
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utterson
a minimal static blog generator written using old-school unix tools (make, ksh, m4, awk, procmail and a pinch of elisp)
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naif-blog-engine
A static blog generator powered by GNU Make, Node.js & SQLite. Includes support for podcast feeds & FTS (full text search)
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Nutrient
Nutrient - The #1 PDF SDK Library. Bad PDFs = bad UX. Slow load times, broken annotations, clunky UX frustrates users. Nutrient’s PDF SDKs gives seamless document experiences, fast rendering, annotations, real-time collaboration, 100+ features. Used by 10K+ devs, serving ~half a billion users worldwide. Explore the SDK for free.
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static-page-generators discussion
static-page-generators reviews and mentions
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“Make” as a Static Site Generator
I did some similar experiments some time ago. It includes Makefiles, Rakefiles, SASS, Ruby erb, Jade, m4, and a few other tools.
https://github.com/W4RH4WK/static-page-generators
Over all, I quite like Ruby since it comes with rake and erb.
Stats
The primary programming language of static-page-generators is Makefile.