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Re: [O] Publishing notes to a website


From: Thomas Herbert
Subject: Re: [O] Publishing notes to a website
Date: Tue, 15 Mar 2011 00:28:42 +0000
User-agent: Dynamic Internet Messaging Program (DIMP) H3 (1.0)

Kyle Sexton <ks <at> mocker.org> writes:

I'm looking for advice on ways people are publishing their org notes
to a website.  So far I've looked at blorgit and it's really nice, but
the dependency for a backend emacs session and running through sinatra
makes me wary of putting it out on my server for the world.

1.  What methods are people using to publish their org notes?
2.  Anyone have sample sites that I can see what the output looks like?

Kyle,

I have been actually been working on a simple clean solution for writing in org-mode and keeping the file as org-mode. What I have come up with is a "Textile" like PHP class that translates org-mode files into HTML.

It is still very very alpha and hope to release the code soon for people to look at, work and improve or completely scrap and take my idea and do it better.

You can see it in action at http://toshine.org where I have built a simple flatfile CMS that reads .org files in a folder, reads the org-mode header, and creates menus, creates post titles, meta descriptions, dates etc and is then passed through my "orgile" php class that spits out HTML. My aim was to simply keep the files as org-mode and stick them in a folder and let the CMS deal with the rest. Also I didn't like the complexity of "Jekyll" http://jekyllrb.com/ installing ruby gems, YAML and all that. I have a single php file for the CMS and a single php file for the "orgile" class. The class is totally independent of the CMS, like "textile" and the "textile class".

If you look at the bottom of a website article you can see the .org file. I still have a lot to do and currently I have just added the features that I needed like basic HTML markup, footnotes and blockquotes. My aim really was to spend time writing my articles and throwing them into a folder. Most of the time I correct the file via "Tramp" in Emacs and don't have to republish anything as the file is just read.

I have though added PHP cache_lite in my CMS so the pages are created as HTML via "orgile" but served as the cached HTML page. Saves PHP processing for pages that don't change the whole time. I just remove the page from cache if I make a edit later.

Anyway have a look and just to say I am totally focused on staying, working and dealing only with org-mode files so I can concentrate on the writing. Hopefully "orgile" will become useful for people or at least spark some better programmers writing a better version of it.

'Mash

http://toshine.org




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