@ctrlaltdog@chitter.xyz hee, not quite
i write in markdown, which github just renders richly (you can look at the raw versions by clicking "raw" on github)
for example, here's the notes page: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Archenoth/archenoth.github.io/master/notes.md
compared to what it renders as on my site: https://archenoth.com/notes/
and here's a blog post: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Archenoth/archenoth.github.io/master/_posts/2013-10-09-Sneaky-images.md
and how that renders: https://archenoth.com/tricks/2013/10/07/Sneaky-images.html
@ctrlaltdog@chitter.xyz you see the posts on the site?
those are just these, converted by jekyll into my layout: https://github.com/Archenoth/archenoth.github.io/tree/master/_posts
@ctrlaltdog@chitter.xyz oh yeah, this will be very good for you then~
jekyll works by reading simple markdown files, and makes pages out of them according to a layout and style you only define need to define once
it also can generate html based on files in a folder--for example, you see the navbar along the top of this site? https://archenoth.com
those are just the .md files in this folder (jekyll did the rest, including the nav links): https://github.com/Archenoth/archenoth.github.io
@ctrlaltdog@chitter.xyz i think you can kinda force it to make one (this came up in a cursory search: https://gist.github.com/billywatson/8620783)
but AFAICT, yeah, it's primarily used for making web applications, and not really static sites
jekyll is very good at doing that though! and it simplifies making a site to an almost extreme degree--which will make sense after you play with it a little~
@ctrlaltdog@chitter.xyz oh yeah, ruby on rails also requires a server that can run custom code, so that's probably a no-go if you are trying to host on github
but if that's fine, it's actually what mastodon was written in: https://rubyonrails.org/
and here's jekyll's homepage, made with jekyll: https://jekyllrb.com/
github has builtin support for this: https://help.github.com/en/github/working-with-github-pages/setting-up-a-github-pages-site-with-jekyll
@ctrlaltdog@chitter.xyz it sounds like they were talking about 1 of 2 things:
1) ruby on rails: a crazy-big framework for making web applications extremely fast (for an idea about how fast, the "hello world" tutorial is making a blog from scratch)
2) jekyll: a static site generator built into github for making blogs and other things really fast by mostly just editing simple markdown files
seeing that your site is a github site, i would probably look at the latter. (it's actually what i use for my site~)
@ctrlaltdog@chitter.xyz i can definitely confirm that last part
i can't actually find other times to listen to them where i don't feel like i should be doing something else, hahah
but gosh, they really make monotonous and boring tasks bearable for me!
as for podcasts, i personally recommend the adventure zone. it takes a little to get into, but it's legit one of the best things i've ever heard!
@monorail ah yes, the anxiety test
not everything has to be fast. not everything has to be efficient.
write in a language that sparks joy. don't want to figure out a clever algorithm? don't. your program is eating ram like a motherfucker but it gets the job done? that's okay
you don't understand recursion? don't use recursion. you don't understand how to manually allocate memory? don't use a language that makes you do that
there's time to learn all of that. or don't! people have worked hard to make it so you don't have to!
just make things
@monorail holly, there's something i need to tell you
i'm pokemon
@ctrlaltdog@chitter.xyz oh! if that's why you like it, i found podcasts were actually *extremely* good at this
i slept on them for a looong time, but i found that, since they take more attention than music, and don't fade into the background while you're doing things, you can basically forget you're doing chores while listening to them
it's pretty much the only way i do them now, and sometimes i actually proactively do chores because i wanna listen to a podcast to find out what happens
@nolan fair enough~
i double-took because i didn't even realize you could do that, and was curious if there was a reason i should try doing that, since it wasn't immediately apparent hahah
but yeah! habits and aesthetics are important too! that's neat
@nolan i noticed this a few minutes ago and now i'm kinda curious!
you pull-request to yourself in your projects..?
@noiob i kinda figured that a lot of it was update maintenance, so i guess it's not super surprising that a major version would take a lot of extra effort :T
i know i already said this but, for reals, good luck! i really appreciate all the effort you put into this..! (seriously, thank you!) ^^
@noiob ah! i remember them mentioning custom code when i first joined, but i didn't know that was one of the things they made
that's neat
oh hi! i do computers, and sometimes draw stuff~ i like lo-fi things and cute aesthetics!
i also probably like you
(also, tagged #abdl ahead, soooo 🔞)