UNK
a very small static site generator
__UNK__ is an experiment in minimalism.
It is a templating static site generator
with an included markup language
that all fits with 1000 bytes.
There are three main scripts:
- UNK, a bash script that applies the template
to each page and publishes them to the output dir,
- LHT, an awk script that serves as a (very) basic
markup language, and
- TM,
the default template script for UNK.
__UNK__ and __LHT__ are 250 bytes each, for a total of 500 bytes.
__TM__ takes up the remaining 500 bytes
of the target 1000 bytes.
You are, of course, free to make the template file as large
and involved as you like.
DETAILS
unk
__UNK__ takes a set of files in a directory, applies a template to them,
and output them into another directory as HTML files ready for a server.
To keep a very small size, __UNK__ delegates most file processing to __TM__,
the main template. It delegates by using an idea found in
shab:
each input file is read as a `heredoc`, which enables
shell interpolation.
So the template, as opposed to the engine,
can do all the heavy-lifting of index generation and navigation and such.
Content goes into the following (hard-coded) directories:
- I/,
for written (Input) content
(the pages of the site),
- S/, for Static content
(css, images, etc.), &
- O/, for the (Output)
website, ready for
rsync
ing to a server.
If there is no __TM__ in the directory where __UNK__ is run,
one will be created that will simply `cat` the file being processed.
The following variables are made available to __TM__:
- FN: the FileName
(with directories removed) of the file being processed
- TT: the TiTle
(the first line) of the file
- BD: the BoDy
(the rest) of the file
as well as this function:
- X, for eXpand:
the
shab
stand-in.
It is much simpler than shab
,
and will fail if the template
(or if it nests templates, one of the nested ones)
has a ZZ
on a line by itself,
due to its heredoc
nature.
and these aliases (though they're more an artefact of saving space
in the script, but they can be used in templates):
As mentioned above, templates can be nested.
Simply call another template from __TM__ with the __X__ function.
lht
__LHT__ stands for *Less HyperText*,
because that's what you're writing when you're writing it
(though not much less than HTML).
Basically,
blank lines are interpreted as <p>
tag breaks,
unless the previous source paragraph started with
<
and ended with >
.
It also has support for three inline spans:
*em*
as em
__strong__
as strong
`code`
as code
Everything else is just HTML.
This means that a valid `.lht` file is *almost* a valid `.md` file,
except where it nests HTML and Markdown
(so it's not really, but you can run it through Markdown in a pinch
and get the basic idea across.
This file, for example, is both `index.lht` and `README.md`
(they're just symlinked to each other),
so it's got some weirdness to keep things compatible between Markdown and LHT.
But if you're just writing for LHT, it can be much simpler.).
__LHT__ was inspired, in part, by
Writing HTML in HTML
by John Ankarstrom,
as well as some other articles I can't think of right now.
I liked the idea, but some tags in HTML are just annoying to write
over and over, and take me out of the flow of writing prose.
So I fixed those few tags.
__The inline tags are definitely subject to change.__
Why?
I was bored and decided I'd try to write a static site generator
that could fit in a
toot
(500 characters).
I
wrote
a few
of them,
making them smaller and smaller each time.
By the end, I was left with a *tiny* script
that delegated almost *all* the work to the template file.
That script became __UNK__ in this repo.
I was feeling pretty high on my horse after writing the tiny SSG,
so I thought,
maybe
I could try for a tootable Markdown converter next —
boy, was I wrong about that.
Markdown is *way* too complicated to fit in 500 bytes.
So I just wrote the Really Important Parts: <p>
and some inlines.
LEGAL
Copyright © 2019 Case Duckworth
<acdw@acdw.net>.
This work is free.
You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of
the Do What The Fuck You Want To Public License, Version 2,
as published by Sam Hocevar.
See the LICENSE file for more details.
Why this license?
I was going to go with a stricter license like the GPL,
but realized that
- this software isn't so important or time-consuming that I need
others to credit me or redistribute the project under the same terms,
and
- the GPL is way too long for a project like this.
It's over 35 times bigger than the entirety of this project,
not counting the content or this README.
It would weigh down the entire undertaking.
The WTFPL, by contrast, is a trim 443 characters,
which is right in keeping with the smallness of this project.