+[2016-12-09T23:10:59Z]jekyllrb(liquid) (#1) https://github.com/Shopify/liquid/wiki/Liquid-for-Designers, or (#2) https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/blob/master/lib/jekyll/filters.rb#L204, or (#3) http://jekyllrb.com/docs/templates/, or (#4) http://shopify.github.com/liquid/ +[2016-12-09T23:11:35Z]allejojekyll powers github pages, so it'll remain alive for quite some time i would think +[2016-12-09T23:41:51Z]jekkysometimes I hear that it would be replaced by WP, then others say it is the other way around, WP being replaced by Jekyll :) +[2016-12-09T23:42:35Z]jekkybut one can say that Jekyll is the best and most popular static site generator, right? +[2016-12-09T23:56:09Z]allejojekyll probably is at the top of google results for static site generators :)
jaybe: I've looked there, but found no explanation
+[2016-12-09T23:57:04Z]allejoit really depends on what you need for your site. some people find WP suitable, others find jekyll suitable, some find both and flip a coin +[2016-12-10T00:12:33Z]jekkyallejo: ok, I really want to try it out because I don't need any fancy cms stuff, and a nice static site means also less trouble +[2016-12-10T00:16:15Z]jekkyallejo: so I installed jekyll, bootstrapped a new project and now set it up to be a single page site +[2016-12-10T00:16:31Z]jekkyallejo: and for a single page site, I could still have the parts of the site as sub-pages, separate files? that would be great +[2016-12-10T00:31:52Z]allejoyeup, you can include other files