Bitbucket also has static web site support. I set one up for the Pygame
docs awhile ago, but have not maintained it:
http://pygame.bitbucket.org/docs/pygame/
The repository is here:
https://bitbucket.org/pygame/pygame.bitbucket.org
Lenard Lindstrom
On 16-12-17 09:16 PM, Daniel Foerster wrote:
You know, I suppose we could just use GitHub pages.
On Dec 17, 2016 17:32, "Charles Cossé" <cco...@gmail.com
<mailto:cco...@gmail.com>> wrote:
On Sat, Dec 17, 2016 at 4:12 PM, Daniel Foerster
<pydsig...@gmail.com <mailto:pydsig...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Using S3/CloudFront is a lot cheaper than the EC2 setup you're
imagining (and which a Django stack would require).
I never said to use Amazon at all. Just use the current server,
whatever it is (unless it's Amazon).
On 12/17/2016 05:11 PM, Charles Cossé wrote:
Yikes! who's gonna pay the Amazon bill?
On Sat, Dec 17, 2016 at 4:09 PM, Paul Vincent Craven
<p...@cravenfamily.com <mailto:p...@cravenfamily.com>> wrote:
If most of the site is static, then I think Django would
be overkill. The static portion of the site can easily be
deployed via Amazon S3/CloudFront and then we'd not have
to maintain a server.
Paul Vincent Craven
On Sat, Dec 17, 2016 at 5:00 PM, Charles Cossé
<cco...@gmail.com <mailto:cco...@gmail.com>> wrote:
On Sat, Dec 17, 2016 at 3:26 PM, Thomas Kluyver
<tak...@gmail.com <mailto:tak...@gmail.com>> wrote:
So far, I think the proposals for the static
information part of the site are Nikola (a static
site generator oriented around blogs) and Sphinx
(oriented around docs). Both are written in
Python. Does anyone want to make the case for any
other system?
Can Django factor-in there? I guess it would reside
underneathe the other pkgs ... but might as well run
Python through-and-through imho.
--
Linkedin <https://www.linkedin.com/in/charles-cosse> |
E-Learning <http://www.asymptopia.org>
--
Linkedin <https://www.linkedin.com/in/charles-cosse> | E-Learning
<http://www.asymptopia.org>