On 10 April 2016 at 16:20, jdd <jdd@dodin.org> wrote:
Le 10/04/2016 15:37, Richard Brown a écrit :
This isn't how Jekyll works at all..
well I wished what you explain (pretty well) in your mail be explained on the jekyll site. This would have prevented me from using it :-)
I think a simple wiki like pmwiki much easier. No database, no git account, any web site accessible with ftp
http://www.pmwiki.org/wiki/PmWiki/Installation
untar the archive and you are done.
the markup is a variant of markdown, simpler than mediawiki one that you need to know for our wiki, and like for our wiki, the only markup one really need is than one have to let a blank line between two paragraphs...
this is even simpler than reading your mail (or mine, by the way :-)
that is why I tested jekyll with an empty text file. a "generator" should have done better than a copy.
When you feed Jekyll something other than markdown files, Jekyll just copies That's a good thing - that's exactly what you want it to do when you want your site generator to deal with other file formats I use that feature for uploading images and presentations to my server. Your wiki might make sense for your own personal use cases, but for me it would be greatly deficient Compared to Jekyll pmwiki has the following missing features - Solid Themeing - Blog post handling (I don't want to have to micro-manage 'articles' in a wiki) - Handling of different filetypes (Copying is good) - Simple blog-like RSS Feeds - Essential if I want my blog to be listed on planet.opensuse.org Each to their own, but the reason I'm sharing this is that it is a nice, relatively simple, reusable, pretty, openSUSE themed blogging option -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-marketing+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-marketing+owner@opensuse.org