Take full control of your static website/blog generation by writing your own simple, lightweight, and magic-free static site generator in Python. That's right! Reinvent the wheel, fellas!
This repository contains the source code of an example website containing two static blogs and a few static pages. The website can be generated by running makesite.py. The output looks like this. That's it!
So go ahead, fork this repository, replace the content with your own, and generate your static website. It's that simple!
You are free to copy, use, and modify this project for your blog or website, so go ahead and fork this repository and make it your own project. Change the layout if you wish to, improve the stylesheet to suit your taste, enhance makesite.py if you need to, and develop your website/blog just the way you want it.
For fun and profit! Okay, maybe not for profit, but hopefully for fun.
Have you used a popular static site generator like Jekyll to generate your blog? I have too. It is simple and great. But then did you yearn to use something even simpler to generate your blog? Do you like Python? Perhaps the thought of writing your own static site generator crossed your mind but you thought it would be too much work? If you answered "yes" to these questions, then this project is for you.
With makesite.py, you are in full control. There is no hidden magic! There is no need to read any documentation to understand how it works. There is no need to learn how to write configuration files to produce some desired effect.
With makesite.py:
- The code is the documentation.
- The code is the configuration.
Everything is laid out as plain and simple Python code for you to read
and enhance. It is less than 120 lines of code (excluding comments,
docstrings, and blank lines). It gets you off the ground pretty quickly.
You only need to execute makesite.py
.
You can develop a decent website/blog within a few minutes and then you can begin tinkering with the source code, the layout, and the stylesheet to customize the look and feel of your website to your satisfaction.
This section provides some quick steps to get you off the ground as quickly as possible.
-
For a quick demo on your local system, just enter this command:
make serve
If you don't have
make
but have Python 3.x, enter this command:python3 makesite.py cd _site python3 -m http.server
Note: In some environments, you may need to use
python
instead ofpython3
to invoke Python 3.x.If you only have Python 2.7, enter this command:
python makesite.py cd _site python -m SimpleHTTPServer
Then visit http://localhost:8000/. It should look like this.
Note: You can run makesite.py with Python 2.7 or Python 3.x.
-
You may see a few
Cannot render Markdown
warning messages in the output of the previous command. This is due to the fact that an example blog in this project has a few posts written in Markdown. To render them correctly, install thecommonmark
package with this command:pip install commonmark
Then try the previous step again.
-
For an Internet-facing website, you would be hosting the static website/blog on a hosting service and/or with a web server such as Apache HTTP Server, Nginx, etc. You probably only need to generate the static files and know where the static files are and move them to your hosting location.
If you have the
make
command, enter this command to generate your website:make site
If you don't have
make
but havepython3
, enter this command:python3 makesite.py
Note: In some environments, you may need to use
python
instead ofpython3
to invoke Python 3.x.If you only have
python
, enter this command:python makesite.py
The
_site
directory contains the entire generated website. The content of this directory may be copied to your website hosting location.
Now that you know how to generate the static website that comes with this project, it is time to see what makesite.py does. You probably don't really need to read the entire section. The source code is pretty self-explanatory but just in case, you need a detailed overview of what it does, here are the details:
-
The
main()
function is the starting point of website generation. It calls the other functions necessary to get the website generation done. -
First it creates a fresh new
_site
directory from scratch. All files in the static directory are copied to this directory. Later the static website is generated and written to this directory. -
Then it creates a
params
dictionary with some default parameters. This dictionary is passed around to other functions. These other functions would pick values from this dictionary to populate placeholders in the layout template files.Let us take the
subtitle
parameter for example. It is set to our example website's fictitious brand name: "Lorem Ipsum". We want each page to include this brand name as a suffix in the title. For example, the about page has "About - Lorem Ipsum" in its title. Now take a look at the page layout template that is used as the layout for all pages in the static website. This layout file uses the{{ subtitle }}
syntax to denote that it is a placeholder that should be populated while rendering the template.Another interesting thing to note is that a content file can override these parameters by defining its own parameters in the content header. For example, take a look at the content file for the home page. In its content header, i.e., the HTML comments at the top with key-value pairs, it defines a new parameter named
title
and overrides thesubtitle
parameter.We will discuss the syntax for placeholders and content headers later. It is quite simple.
-
It then loads all the layout templates. There are 6 of them in this project.
-
layout/page.html: It contains the base template that applies to all pages. It begins with
<!DOCTYPE html>
and<html>
, and ends with</html>
. The{{ content }}
placeholder in this template is replaced with the actual content of the page. For example, for the about page, the{{ content }}
placeholder is replaced with the the entire content from content/about.html. This is done with themake_pages()
calls further down in the code. -
layout/post.html: It contains the template for the blog posts. Note that it does not begin with
<!DOCTYPE html>
and does not contain the<html>
and</html>
tags. This is not a complete standalone template. This template defines only a small portion of the blog post pages that are specific to blog posts. It contains the HTML code and the placeholders to display the title, publication date, and author of blog posts.This template must be combined with the page layout template to create the final standalone template. To do so, we replace the
{{ content }}
placeholder in the page layout template with the HTML code in the post layout template to get a final standalone template. This is done with therender()
calls further down in the code.The resulting standalone template still has a
{{ content }}
placeholder from the post layout template template. This{{ content }}
placeholder is then replaced with the actual content from the blog posts. -
layout/list.html: It contains the template for the blog listing page, the page that lists all the posts in a blog in reverse chronological order. This template does not do much except provide a title at the top and an RSS link at the bottom. The
{{ content }}
placeholder is populated with the list of blog posts in reverse chronological order.Just like the post layout template , this template must be combined with the page layout template to arrive at the final standalone template.
-
layout/item.html: It contains the template for each blog post item in the blog listing page. The
make_list()
function renders each blog post item with this template and inserts them into the list layout template to create the blog listing page. -
layout/feed.xml: It contains the XML template for RSS feeds. The
{{ content }}
placeholder is populated with the list of feed items. -
layout/item.xml: It contains the XML template for each blog post item to be included in the RSS feed. The
make_list()
function renders each blog post item with this template and inserts them into the layout/feed.xml template to create the complete RSS feed.
-
-
After loading all the layout templates, it makes a
render()
call to combine the post layout template with the page layout template to form the final standalone post template.Similarly, it combines the list layout template template with the page layout template to form the final list template.
-
Then it makes two
make_pages()
calls to render the home page and a couple of other site pages: the contact page and the about page. -
Then it makes two more
make_pages()
calls to render two blogs: one that is named simply blog and another that is named news.Note that the
make_pages()
call accepts three positional arguments:- Path to content source files provided as a glob pattern.
- Output path template as a string.
- Layout template code as a string.
These three positional arguments are then followed by keyword arguments. These keyword arguments are used as template parameters in the output path template and the layout template to replace the placeholders with their corresponding values.
As described in point 2 above, a content file can override these parameters in its content header.
-
Then it makes two
make_list()
calls to render the blog listing pages for the two blogs. These calls are very similar to themake_pages()
calls. There are only two things that are different about themake_list()
calls:- There is no point in reading the same blog posts again that were
read by
make_pages()
, so instead of passing the path to content source files, we feed a chronologically reverse-sorted index of blog posts returned bymake_pages()
tomake_list()
. - There is an additional argument to pass the item layout template as a string.
- There is no point in reading the same blog posts again that were
read by
-
Finally it makes two more
make_list()
calls to generate the RSS feeds for the two blogs. There is nothing different about these calls than the previous ones except that we use the feed XML templates here to generate RSS feeds.
To recap quickly, we create a _site
directory to write the static site
generated, define some default parameters, load all the layout
templates, and then call make_pages()
to render pages and blog posts
with these templates, call make_list()
to render blog listing pages
and RSS feeds. That's all!
Take a look at how the make_pages()
and make_list()
functions are
implemented. They are very simple with less than 20 lines of code each.
Once you are comfortable with this code, you can begin modifying it to
add more blogs or reduce them. For example, you probably don't need a
news blog, so you may delete the make_pages()
and make_list()
calls
for 'news'
along with its content at content/news.
In this project, the layout template files are located in the layout directory. But they don't necessarily have to be there. You can place the layout files wherever you want and update makesite.py accordingly.
The source code of makesite.py that comes with this project understands the notion of placeholders in the layout templates. The template placeholders have the following syntax:
{{ <key> }}
Any whitespace before {{
, around <key>
, and after }}
is ignored.
The <key>
should be a valid Python identifier. Here is an example of
template placeholder:
{{ title }}
This is a very simple template mechanism that is implemented already in the makesite.py. For a simple website or blog, this should be sufficient. If you need a more sophisticated template engine such as Jinja2 or Cheetah, you need to modify makesite.py to add support for it.
In this project, the content files are located in the content directory. Most of the content files are written in HTML. However, the content files for the blog named blog are written in Markdown.
The notion of headers in the content files is supported by makesite.py. Each content file may begin with one or more consecutive HTML comments that contain headers. Each header has the following syntax:
<!-- <key>: <value> -->
Any whitespace before, after, and around the <!--
, <key>
, :
,
<value>
, and -->
tokens are ignored. Here are some example headers:
<!-- title: About -->
<!-- subtitle: Lorem Ipsum -->
<!-- author: Admin -->
It looks for the headers at the top of every content file. As soon as some non-header text is encountered, the rest of the content from that point is not checked for headers.
Thanks to:
- Susam for the documentation and the unit tests.
- Keith Gaughan for an improved single-pass rendering of templates.
This is free and open source software. You can use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of it, under the terms of the MIT License.
This software is provided "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, express or implied. See the MIT License for details.
To report bugs, suggest improvements, or ask questions, please visit https://github.com/sunainapai/makesite/issues.