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| | | | | www.simpleprimate.com | |
| | | | | Jekyll bills itself as "a simple, blog-aware, static site generator." It takes source files like templates, stylesheets, includes, and posts and uses them to generate a website that can then be hosted on your server of choice. This means that the entire website is generated at once, and visitors are simply served static files. | |
| | | | | www.crosenthal.com | |
| | | | | I used to run a pretty complicated publishing workflow on this website. I dont anymore. Im writing this up because it might be useful for somebody else who uses the Jekyll static site generator for publishing to their own private hosting site. | |
| | | | | schmonz.com | |
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| | | | | michaelneuper.com | |
| | | Setting up your own static website can be a great way to showcase your personal brand, portfolio, or business online. In this post, we'll walk through the process of setting up a static website using Hugo as the static site generator and Netlify as the hosting service. Building The Site First, let's talk about what a static website is and why it's a good choice for many people. A static website is a website that is built using only HTML, CSS, and JavaScript files. These files are served to the user's web browser as-is, without the need for any server-side processing. This makes static websites fast, secure, and easy to maintain. | ||