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Re: [O] Moving from Jekyll to Orgmode
From: |
Ista Zahn |
Subject: |
Re: [O] Moving from Jekyll to Orgmode |
Date: |
Sun, 29 Apr 2018 08:58:28 -0400 |
On Sun, Apr 29, 2018 at 4:50 AM, ST <address@hidden> wrote:
> Hi Scott,
>
> thank you, and all other responders, for the shared information. The
> reason I want to leave Jekyll is because I don't want to depend on a
> tool that relies on language (Ruby)/environment that I don't know/use
> (in this respect Hugo is the same for me). I prefer something more
> simplistic, even though if I'll have to invest some time for it to work
> initially. Those 3 features I've mentioned are almost all I need, more
> or less.
>
> Could you, please, share your website publishing workflow (considering
> the 3 issues I've mentioned)?
I use Nikola (https://getnikola.com/). It has a plugin for org source files
(https://plugins.getnikola.com/v8/orgmode/). It claims to support
multilingual sites, though I have not used that feature.
--Ista
>
> Thank you!
>
> On Sat, 2018-04-28 at 18:13 -0400, Scott Randby wrote:
>> On 04/28/2018 05:40 PM, Diego Zamboni wrote:
>> >
>> > Org-mode is not really a website-publishing tool like Jekyll, although it
>> > can be part of the chain. Org-mode at its core is a markup language,
>> > although with considerable tooling support from org-mode and related tools
>> > in Emacs.
>> >
>>
>> I think Org is a good website publishing tool in many ways. I've been using
>> it for making and publishing my website since 2010. Sure, it has some
>> limitations, but I think it can be made to work nicely for a lot of types of
>> sites. But I do agree that the Org/Hugo combination is really good.
>>
>> Scott Randby
>>
>
>
Re: [O] Moving from Jekyll to Orgmode, Saša Janiška, 2018/04/29
Re: [O] Moving from Jekyll to Orgmode, Grant Rettke, 2018/04/29