+ [2013-09-27T19:56:21Z] D-Chymera is my query clearer now?
+ [2013-09-27T20:01:18Z] trevlar D-Chymera: I kind of do that with something else. My main jekyll site has a git submodule with a path in _includes. Then I just {% include submodule_dir/file.md %} on whichever page I want that embedded
+ [2013-09-27T20:01:44Z] trevlar then I can just update the submodule, rebuild the jekyll site, and it updates with fresh content
+ [2013-09-27T20:48:11Z] Ahti333 shikhin I don't think so
+ [2013-09-27T20:48:29Z] Ahti333 I guess I'll use two separate git branches

message no. 10542

Posted by jaybe in #jekyll at 2013-09-27T02:53:09Z

by default, jekyll/blogs publish and provide content chronologically. if you publish new content, which is older than previous content, it will be newer and 'latest'.
+ [2013-09-28T01:06:27Z] pontiki D-Chymera1: is the question how you reference your repository contents?
+ [2013-09-28T01:06:39Z] pontiki and i had no idea you meant what you just described
+ [2013-09-28T01:07:07Z] pontiki because what you're talking about has nothing at all to do with jekyll
+ [2013-09-28T01:08:27Z] pontiki github has an api to access repositories
+ [2013-09-28T01:08:54Z] pontiki if using wordpress, you might be able to find such a plugin already