On Wednesday, November 28, 2012 8:55:52 AM UTC+1, Alex P wrote:
>
> Hey guys. 
>
> Not sure if it's a good idea, but worked just fine for us. We've created 
> Docslate (https://github.com/clojurewerkz/docslate), which is pretty much 
> a basis for all the guides/websites for our projects.
>
> I understand that long-term plan may be going anywhere far, but for 
> starters simple Twitter bootstrap and Jekyll website should be just fine, 
> or?.. 
>

Totally. I want to keep using github pages as long as it is sufficient for 
us.
 

>
> Check it out. In the end, it's quite customizable, has good typography. 
> The latest effort I'm aware of that's using pretty much same thing is: 
> Clojure Documentation Guides 
> http://clojure-doc.org/articles/language/interop.html , there's a more 
> "customized" project, Monger: http://clojuremongodb.info
>
> But once again - it's just a matter of time, every project sooner or later 
> gets lots of style customizations as content grows. I really suggest taking 
> a look at either docslate itself, or creating same thing (Bootstrap + 
> Jekyll (or any lightweight blogging engine you love) + Markdown (or any 
> markup language you love)), that will get you started real quick (for 
> instance, http://typhoeus.github.com was created in under 30 minutes), 
> and will stimulate project growth, which is in the end more important than 
> pretty looks
>

Thanks I'll check them out :)

# solnic 

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