hugo is nice - but it's huge. I've never built a static site generator before and thought the world could use one more - it's not like there's already enough choice out there! No, but seriously. I love hugo and it has all the bells and whistles and you should definitely use that and not this. I just like reinventing the wheel to learn about stuff - and I like the 80/20 rule. This gives like 60% of what I want already and is tiny fraction of hugo in terms of LOC (hugo without it's bazillion dependencies is like 80k+ - this is like 500 and very likely won't ever grow above let's say 5k). Also org mode is awesome and why not use it as a configuration format as well. Let's see where this goes. YOLO.
1.8 KiB
1.8 KiB
go-org https://travis-ci.org/niklasfasching/go-org.svg?branch=master
An Org mode parser in go. And soon a blog generator.
Take a look at github pages for some examples and to try it out live in your browser.
Please note
- the goal for the html export is to produce sensible html output, not to exactly reproduce the output of
org-html-export
. - the goal for the parser is to support a reasonable subset of Org mode. Org mode is huge and I like to follow the 80/20 rule.
usage
command line
go-org
as a library
see main.go and hugo org/convert.go
development
make setup install
- change things
make preview
(regenerates fixtures & shows output in a browser)
in general, have a look at the Makefile - it's short enough.
resources
-
test files
- https://orgmode.org/manual/
- https://orgmode.org/worg/dev/org-syntax.html
-
https://code.orgmode.org/bzg/org-mode/src/master/lisp/org.el
- https://code.orgmode.org/bzg/org-mode/src/master/lisp/org-element.el
- mostly those & ox-html.el, but yeah, all of https://code.orgmode.org/bzg/org-mode/src/master/lisp/
- existing Org mode implementations: org, org-ruby, goorgeous, pandoc