0.1.3 • Published 13 years ago
plankton v0.1.3
Plankton - a static blog generator for node
Plankton uses markdown files as source and EJS templates for layout.
Getting started
Install using NPM:
$ npm install -g planktonBlog posts are markdown files which contain a YAML front-matter. For example:
---
title: Ipsum
author: Kishore Nallan
date: January 26, 2013
published: true
layout: post
---
This is *some* text. First para here.
Second para is _right_ here!The YAML front-matter allows you to define the following post-level properties:
- title- The title of the post. Note that this is NOT used to generate the URL slug. The URL slug is generated using the original name of the markdown file.
- author- Author of the post.
- date- The date the blog post was written.
- published- Set this to- falseif you don't want to publish a post (e.g. if it's still in a draft form).
Place your markdown files in a _posts folder and your EJS template files in a _layouts folder. A EJS template
itself can contain a YAML font-matter that specifies a parent template. For example:
---
layout: wrapper
---
<h1>Post page</h1>
<h2><%= post.title %></h2>
<%- post.body %>The EJS template has access to the following template variables:
- posts- An array of all posts parsed from the- _postsdirectory.
- post- The actual post.- post.bodycontains the post text and- post.titlecontains the title of the post. You can also access all other properties specified in the YAML front-matter as properties of the- postobject.
- content- If a template file specifies another template as a layout, the referred layout file get the contents of the subview as the- contentvariable.
Publishing the site
To publish the site, call plankton from the command-line:
$ plankton --src=./example --dest=./outCheck out the the /example folder to see a bare-bones example.
Todo
- Pagination
- Tags