Hello all!
I’m documenting a small FOSS project, and I’m looking for some soft that translates a documentation into a web page.
Something simple, with a side board that links the pages/titles/sub-titles, and is PC and Mobile compatible. Basically images, italics, bold and links, with titles and subtitles, would be nice 🙂.
Like the Lemmy install guide for example: https://join-lemmy.org/docs/administration/install_docker.html
Any recommendations?
Thank you all!
You can have a look at hugo, with some simple theme like hugo-book
The example site is a bit cluttered, but maybe that’s just optional, will check out, thanks!
VitePress might be what you’re looking for.
Tried it but how do you actually build the static html files? It’s only explaining how to run the site through some sort of java script machinery?
Nice otherwise, thanks!
My go-to for this is
pandoc
, it takes markdown and can generate html, pdf, word, OpenOffice and other formats.Because it uses markdown, you can use version control and grep on your documentation and include it with your source code.
Thanks, but for now I think that looks like overkill for my small needs.
It’s really simple to use, and markdown is essentially plain text.
I haven’t tried yet, but it seens like a lot to just get up and running, will check out if that other one doesn’t make static websites.
I like mkdocs because it generates the entire site from markdown files
Thanks, I just tested mdBook and it does just that, it’s great!
That Lemmy guide uses mdBook: https://rust-lang.github.io/mdBook/
It originates from the Rust ecosystem, but it’s basically language agnostic.
You basically provide it Markdown files in a certain file structure and then it does the rest. Really easy to use.Very nice! Seems like a hassle to install though, but I’ll definitely check it out, looks exactly what I’m looking for (as long as you can throw in images, didn’t see that at my first very brief glance).
Hmm, I think, you can download one of the .tar.gz files from here: https://github.com/rust-lang/mdBook/releases
Unpack it and then just run the executable that’s inside.And yes, images are absolutely possible.
You can just place the image file in the file structure and then in your Markdown file, you can use this syntax:![Optional description for sight-impaired users](relative/path/to/image.png)
I usually create an “images” sub-folder next to the Markdown file, then it’s just:
![](images/something.png)
Very nice, will definitely check out!
Seems like exactly what I’m looking for.
Update, works wonders thank you so much! 💖