Moving from WordPress to Jekyll (and static site generators in general)

demandsphere.com

19 points by rgrieselhuber 3 hours ago


alwillis - an hour ago

Been on the Jekyll bandwagon for a long time now; it's my go-to static site generator.

mc007 - an hour ago

interesting, we went from classic CMS to Jekyll, then Hugo, then Astro and finally built our own CMS - for larger sets of content and sites. Fiddling with custom DSLs, templates, weird builds and tricks ... was just way too time consuming - unthinkable my wife would ever touch it or write an article in there :)

Have a look at https://service.polymech.info/user/cgo/pages/poolypress-cms, agentic CMS, translates, creates and manages articles with a few prompts, widget aware.

donohoe - 2 hours ago

I don’t get it. Their setup is so much more complicated and limiting than what they had on Wordpress.

I won’t argue with their reasons to move (which don’t stack up for me either but agree to disagree).

pseudosavant - an hour ago

I recently retired my Wordpress blog and replaced it with a static-site generator. My requirements were straight-forward and I ended up having Codex build it for me.

It was the last thing using MySQL, PHP, and Wordpress on my site. 3 big things to not have to keep up-to-date and secured. I can check in markdown to my repo, it builds the site, and Nginx serves it. So fast, and secure.

purplehat_ - 2 hours ago

what's the advantage of a static site generator over pandoc + makefile?

KaiShips - an hour ago

[dead]