On 2023-05-08, at 17:48, VinÃcius Moraes <vinicius.mor...@eternodevir.com> wrote:
> I recommend using Hugo, since it supports org-mode files > directly. Setting up Hugo to meet your requirements can be done in > many ways, and you can find almost everything you need in their > documentation. Although there is a bit of a learning curve, it's nothing > that an Emacs user can't handle. Yeah, you're probably right. Though frankly I'd prefer to spend as little time as possible on learning the tools here - I do not intend to become a Hugo wizard, I just need it for this one project (well, maybe two, but that's it). > For integration and workflow, I've been using the easy-hugo package. It > has everything I've needed so far, from writing to publishing to > managing. While Hugo does support org files, there are some cases where > you need to tinker a bit to make it work properly. For example, the > other day, I was trying to publish a poem using verse blocks and it > didn't work. All I had to do was trying another way, which was adding > "//" at the end of each verse to have proper line breaking. > > You'll learn many little things like this through experience, and if > needed, you can always use HTML/Go code to complement org-mode features. > > Regardless of which tool path you choose, blogging with org-mode is a > great experience. I know, I write my blog in Org and then export to Oddmuse using my custom exporter I wrote many years ago. But it's not fully automated, and this time I'd like to have something much more automated. (Also, I don't want any DHTML - I just want to have a bunch of static files so that it's goin gto be really fast.) Best, -- Marcin Borkowski http://mbork.pl