--- date: 2022-10-24 title: Static Site Generators --- So my current fascination is static site generators---programs that you can feed, for example, a set of plain-text blog files, and have them rendered into a folder full of "static" HTML files that can be deployed directly to a webserver with no "moving parts." Websites made of static files are nice, both because those files are very easy to cache for a significant speed up at load time, and because the number of places security holes could be hiding is greatly reduced. This blog uses an SSG called [Eleventy.js](https://www.11ty.dev/). ## Why don't you just use \_\_\_\_\_\_? I didn't want to use a standard blog platform for a couple of reasons: first, hosting it myself gives me ultimate control of the content I produce, forever. I'm not interested in having someone else monetize my work with ads or paywalls. I don't need the extra features those platforms would present to me---I'm not worried about SEO or growing my readership; I have ADHD, and if I'm honest with myself, I'm not sure this attempt at a blog will last any longer than the previous ones. Second, I like making things myself, even when I'm kinda sorta reinventing the wheel. It may take more time, but I always give familiar skills a good stretch, and I almost always learn something new. I find the process kinda, like... meditative, and fulfilling, and I *love* how what I produce at the end fits me and my process like a glove. Being able to write in Markdown in vim and save my entire site in a [self-hosted Git repository](https://git.alexishovorka.com/blog.git/) feels extremely comfy to me. And finally third, which is sort of a fusion of the previous two: doing it myself lets me experiment much more easily. Adding a light/dark mode switch like the one in the top right corner to a standard-issue blog template would have taken me a lot more work. But since I designed this entire site from scratch, it only took me a handful of lines of code that go right where I want to put them. And all the little icons around the site---it was fun playing around with CSS shapes again, instead of just slapping down SVGs or PNGs or whatever. ## My Setup The best description of my setup would be [the actual code](https://git.alexishovorka.com/blog.git/tree/) since it's bound to evolve at least somewhat from anything I could write here. I'll go over some of the trickier bits here though. The cleanest way I found to set a default page template in Eleventy.js was to create a file at `globals/layout.js` which masks what would otherwise have been generated by the system up to that point. At time of writing, it's pretty short, just one line: ```js module.exports = "post.njk"; ``` `post.njk` is the layout template file for the page for an individual post. The same goes for the default page titles inside `globals/eleventyComputed.json`: ```json { {% raw %}"pageTitle": "{{ title | safe }} – {{ metadata.title | safe }}"{% endraw %} } ``` Figuring out the most optimal way to set up the history pages took a little doing. What I've settled on for now is putting them under `/archive/` with `/archive/1/` being blurbs from the first five posts (once I've written that many, of course). I haven't actually made the little heart-shaped "Like Post" button at the bottom work yet, but the current plan is to make a little script that logs the post's title to a text file and returns a 204, then when I want to get like counts I can just do `sort likes.txt | uniq -c`. No funky injectable databases---if there's spam, I can just delete the lines from the file and maybe insert a little check to drop entries if there are any obvious patterns. That's it for now, I guess? See ya :wave: