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A simple static website generator

Project description

sssimp 🐍

Simple Static SIte Maker in Python

A simple tool to generate a static website while being able to use powerful HTML templates (Jinja2), Markdown files converted to HTML, and other preprocessors.

Why?

I wanted a simple way to generate static websites and I like Jinja2. I had previous experiences working with Jekyll but it seemed like too much work to setup everytime and overkill for the job as it supports many features I don't necessarily use.

Installing

pip install sssimp

How to use

Create a folder called input, it will hold the data to generate the site.

Running python -m sssimp will generate content in the output folder.

Here is an example script for UNIX that will regenerate the site everytime a file changes, useful during development:

trap "echo Exited!; exit 1;" SIGINT SIGTERM

while true; do
	python -m venv .venv
	source .venv/bin/activate
	pip install --upgrade sssimp
	python -m sssimp

	echo Waiting for change
	watch -g ls -lR .
done

Generators

  • Files placed in input/content will be directly copied to the output folder

    Example:
    input/content/favicon.png -> output/favicon.png

  • HTML files with the suffix .html placed in input/content will be parsed as Jinja2 templates, they can use templates defined in input/templates.
    See the Jinja2 documentation

    Example:
    input/content/index.html -> output/index.html
    Starting with content

    {% extends "base.html" %}
    
    ...
    

    Will use the template input/templates/base.html

  • CSS files in input/css will be merged together in a single file output/bundle.css

  • Markdown files with the suffix .md placed in input/content will be parsed to HTML and passed to a template with the same name as their parent folder as the parameter markdown

    Example:
    ./input/content/post/hello-world.md -> ./output/post/hello-world.html
    Using the template ./input/templates/post.html
    Generated with context {'markdown': 'the markdown file converted to HTML'}

    The template name can be overriden using the markdown meta argument "template"

    Example:
    ./input/content/post/special.md -> ./output/post/special.html
    Starting with content

    ---
    template: special.html
    ---
    
    ...
    

    Will use the template ./input/templates/special.html instead of post.html

    Examples

    See the example branch for an example input folder

Additional Jinja2 filters

  • |a makes any relative path point to the top of the output folder.

    Example:
    input/content/blog/post/tech/2021/11/some-post.html -> output/blog/post/tech/2021/11/some-post.html
    With content

    <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ "style.css"|a }}">
    

    Will be rendered as "../../../../style.css"

    See also the <base> element

Additional Jinja2 variables

  • page is a sssimp.generators.html.Page, it contains many information about the current document. Markdown files are an instance of sssimp.generators.markdown.MarkdownPage instead, which inherits from Page

    This variable itself contains many useful variables:

    • page.last_modified and page.created_at (may be the same on Linux)

    • page.href: The path to the file relative to the output folder

    • page.src: A pathlib.Path object of the source file in the input folder

    • page.target A pathlib.Path object of the target file in the output folder

    • page.name: Shortcut for page.target.name, the filename of the outputed file

    • page.parent: Shortcut for page.target.parent, the name of the parent directory in the output folder file

    • page.meta: The Markdown meta variables, prefixing a var with = will interpret it as raw JSON Example

      ---
      some_var: some value
      something_else: 42
      some_tags:= ["tag1", "tag2"]
      ---
      
      My cool blog post
      ...
      

      The meta variable will always contain a template which will resolve to the parent directory name with .html appended if none is set in the meta fields.

      The page.meta variable is None for raw HTML pages, this avoids KeyErrors when trying to filter pages by a specific meta variable.

  • plain_text[^md]: A plain text representation of the Markdown file

  • markdown[^md]: The Markdown content converted to HTML

  • meta[^md]: A shortcut for page.meta

  • title[^md]: Returns page.meta.title if it exists, else the filename with the characters - and _ replaced by whitespaces, the suffix removed and the first letter capitalized.

    Example:
    input/content/some-cool-page.md's title is "Some cool page"

  • BUNDLE_FILE always evaluates to "bundle.css" for now

  • BUNDLE_TIME modification time of the latest updated file in input/css, very useful to make the browser refresh the file only if any of the CSS files changed.

    Example:

    <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ BUNDLE_FILE}}?{{ BUNDLE_TIME }}">
    
  • PAGES a list of sssimp.generators.html.Page objects containing every HTML and Markdown files sourced by the site. You can loop over it to generate an index. In conjunction with looking up meta values it can be used to filter by content type.

    Example:

    {% for page in PAGES if page.meta.template == 'post.html' %}
    <a href="{{ page.href }}">{{ page.title }}</a>
    <div class="tags">
      {% for tag in page.meta.tags %}
      <span class="tag">{{ tag }}</span>
      {% endfor %}
    </div>
    Posted on <time>{{ page.created_at }}</time>
    {% endfor %}
    

[^md]: Markdown only

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