jekyllplus
notion-sdk-js
jekyllplus | notion-sdk-js | |
---|---|---|
1 | 22 | |
129 | 4,640 | |
- | 1.4% | |
- | 6.4 | |
4 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Vue | TypeScript | |
- | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
jekyllplus
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Show HN: Pages CMS – A CMS for GitHub
In a nutshell:
1. You log in with your GitHub account.
2. You select the GitHub repo where your site/app is at (whether it's Next.js, 11ty, Hugo, Nuxt... as long as you're using flat files for content).
3. You add a single config file to your repo to define the content types and other settings (e.g. media folder).
4. Congrats: you now have a user friendly CMS to manage content + media BUT all changes are still tracked like regular commits (under your account) on GitHub.
I started using Jekyll around 2009 and over the course of the past 10+ years, I've helped build major sites and tiny blogs with Hugo, Gatsby, Next.js and more recently 11ty.
I still love it.
BUT once you're done building, managing content and media can be a bit of a pain. You have a few options:
- Edit files directly (on GitHub or your local). Good luck getting your colleagues on the marketing team to do that.
- Hook up a headless CMS like Contentful, Sanity, or Strapi. That works, but it's one more dependency and (IMHO) overkill in most cases.
- OR you could use something like [Decap CMS](https://decapcms.org/). Really cool project, but I've never been a fan of the UI/UX, and it's been a bit of a pain to setup (maybe that's just me).
I wanted something as simple as possible, preferably with nothing to install or deploy.
Back in 2018, I had built a prototype (Jekyll+) [1] with the idea of getting a CMS set up by just adding a single configuration file to your GitHub repository.
Pages CMS [2] is a continuation of that idea. It's 100% free and Open Source: https://github.com/pages-cms/pages-cms.
If you don't want to use the online version because you're not comfortable signing up with your GitHub account, consider the following options:
- Use a fine-grained personal access token [3], there's an option on the login screen. There is still a bug if you try to access a repo that isn't part of your token scope, but I'll get it fixed in the next couple of days.
- Deploy it yourself (for free) on Cloudflare Pages. Literally 5 minutes of work max. I made a video walking you through the process [4].
- Check out the intro video on the front page [2] (a bit crap, but I'll get a better one up in the next few days).
I use it actively with a few other teams, I hope it will be of use to some of you.
I'm already working on adding a few nicer features, like collaborative editing and email invites (to let non-developers login without a GitHub account).
PS: I've spent the past 8+ years building a business and only recently got back into coding. I'd love pointers as to what I could do better (and how I can manage my Powerpoint PTSD).
[1]: https://github.com/hunvreus/jekyllplus/
[2]: https://pagescms.org
[3]: https://docs.github.com/en/authentication/keeping-your-accou...
[4]: https://pagescms.org/docs/development/
notion-sdk-js
- Show HN: Pages CMS – A CMS for GitHub
- Regarding notion api
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Convert HTML To Notion Blocks
Here is an example of how to create a new page in your Notion workspace with the blocks converted from the original HTML. We use the @notionhq/client library and you'll need to have a valid Notion API key and database ID:
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I created an open source library (notion-on-next) that makes building a Notion-powered Next.js App super easy. It automatically generates types and scaffolds your app to match your database properties!
Provides data fetching functions that add some utility to the notion-sdk
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Helping Your Users Write Simpler API Calls With "api" ✍️
Thousands of great APIs run their developer hubs on ReadMe, where our customers are already documenting every little detail about their API using the OpenAPI Specification. This got us thinking: “the OpenAPI Specification already provides a ton of valuable information about an API, what if we use this to generate an SDK that’s as good as Notion’s JavaScript SDK”?
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For developers out there using the API, is there a way to trigger a GET request by typing on Notion, and not the other way around?
The official guide actually suggests to poll all the time and compare to local DB to imitate webhooks.
- Why Would Anyone Need JavaScript Generator Functions?
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Does a Notion extension exist that will populate a Notion table with my Reddit submissions like this?
Here are the links if you need them JavaScript https://github.com/makenotion/notion-sdk-js
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NotionPyMail - Triggers Email when value in database is changed
Hey, I created a Notion automation in Python that sends an Email to a given recipient when the value of a select property in a Notion database is changed. To send the Email, the SendGrid API is used. I inspired myself at the official Notion node.js implementation.
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Understanding SEO and Web Vitals for your NextJS site and how to improve them?
Go To Documentation
What are some alternatives?
Publii - The most intuitive Static Site CMS designed for SEO-optimized and privacy-focused websites.
notion-api-server-demo - This application shows the demo code for the tutorial on building using the Notion API.
decap-cms - A Git-based CMS for Static Site Generators
twan-dev - Always wanted to use Notion as your CMS? Well, now you can! [Moved to: https://github.com/twankruiswijk/Blion]
notion-to-md - Convert notion pages, block and list of blocks to markdown (supports nesting and custom parsing)
fastify-auth - Run multiple auth functions in Fastify
website - The official website for Pages CMS (including the documentation).
dotenv - Loads environment variables from .env for nodejs projects.
blissue - A blog based on github issues
fastify - Fast and low overhead web framework, for Node.js
pages-cms - A user-friendly CMS for static site generators.
dotenv - A Ruby gem to load environment variables from `.env`.