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nanoc is a simple but very flexible static site generator written in Ruby. It operates on local files, and therefore does not run on the server. nanoc “compiles” the local source files into HTML (usually), by evaluating eRuby, Markdown, etc.
Note: This documentation looks best with Yardoc, not RDoc.
The nanoc web site contains a few useful resources to help you get started with nanoc. If you need further assistance, the following places will help you out:
- The discussion group
- The IRC channel
nanoc uses Semantic Versioning.
The source code is located in lib/nanoc
and is structured in a few
directories:
base
contains the bare essentials necessary for nanoc to functionsource_data
contains raw, uncompiled content that will be compiledresult_data
contains the compiled contentcompilation
contains the compilation functionality
cli
contains the commandline interfacedata_sources
contains the standard data sources ({Nanoc::DataSource} subclasses), such as the filesystem data sourceextra
contains stuff that is not needed by nanoc itself, but which may be used by helpers, data sources, filters or VCSes.filters
contains the standard filters ({Nanoc::Filter} subclasses) such as ERB, Markdown, Haml, …helpers
contains helpers, which provide functionality some sites may find useful, such as the blogging and tagging helperstasks
contains rake tasks that perform a variety of functions such as validating HTML and CSS, uploading compiled files, …
The namespaces (modules) are organised like this:
- {Nanoc} is the namespace for everything nanoc-related (obviously). The
classes in
lib/nanoc/base
are part of this module (notNanoc::Base
) - {Nanoc::CLI} containing everything related to the commandline tool.
- {Nanoc::DataSources} contains the data sources
- {Nanoc::Helpers} contains the helpers
- {Nanoc::Extra} contains useful stuff not needed by nanoc itself
- {Nanoc::Filters} contains the (textual) filters
The central class in nanoc is {Nanoc::Site}, so you should start there if you want to explore nanoc from a technical perspective.
nanoc has few dependencies. It is possible to use nanoc programmatically without any dependencies at all, but if you want to use nanoc in a proper way, you’ll likely need some dependencies:
- The commandline frontend depends on
cri
. - The autocompiler depends on
mime-types
andrack
. - Filters and helpers likely have dependencies on their own too.
If you’re developing for nanoc, such as writing custom filters or helpers, you may be interested in the development dependencies:
- For documentation generation you’ll need
yard
. - For packaging you’ll need
rubygems
(1.3 or newer). - For testing you’ll need
mocha
andminitest
.
(In alphabetical order)
- Ben Armston
- Colin Barrett
- Bil Bas
- Dmitry Bilunov
- Fabian Buch
- Devon Luke Buchanan
- Stefan Bühler
- Dan Callahan
- Brian Candler
- Jack Chu
- Michal Cichra
- Zaiste de Grengolada
- Vincent Driessen
- Chris Eppstein
- Jeff Forcier
- Riley Goodside
- Felix Hanley
- Justin Hileman
- Starr Horne
- Daniel Hofstetter
- Tuomas Kareinen
- Greg Karékinian
- Matt Keveney
- Kevin Lynagh
- Go Maeda
- Nikhil Marathe
- Daniel Mendler
- Stuart Montgomery
- Ale Muñoz
- John Nishinaga
- Gregory Pakosz
- Nicky Peeters
- Christian Plessl
- Damien Pollet
- Šime Ramov
- Xavier Shay
- Arnau Siches
- “Soryu”
- Eric Sunshine
- Dennis Sutch
- Takashi Uchibe
- Matthias Vallentin
- Ruben Verborgh
- Scott Vokes
- Toon Willems
You can reach me at [email protected].