This repository will contain "PlutoPages", the site generation system that powers https://plutojl.org and https://github.com/mitmath/computational-thinking
Contact https://github.com/LucaFerranti for more info!
PluoPages.jl is a site generation system inspired by https://www.11ty.dev/. It's a tool that turns a folder of files (Pluto notebook, Markdown files, images, and more) into a complete static website, that you can host using a service like GitHub Pages or Netlify.
PlutoPages searches for input files, and turns them into web pages. There are three template systems:
.jlhtml
files are rendered by HypertextLiteral.jl.jlmd
files are rendered by MarkdownLiteral.jl.jl
files are rendered by PlutoSliderServer.jl
The /src/
folder is scanned for files, and all files are turned into HTML pages.
Paths correspond to URLs. For example, src/en/docs/install.jlmd
will become available at plutojl.org/en/docs/install/
. For files called "index", the URL will point to its parent, e.g. src/en/docs/index.jlmd
becomes plutojl.org/en/docs/
. Remember that changing URLs is very bad! You can't share Pluto with your friends if the links break.
You can generate & preview your website locally (more on this later), and there is a github action that you can use to generate the website when we push to the main
branch, to deploy your website automatically when you change the code.
We use Julia as our templating system! Because we use HypertextLiteral and MarkdownLiteral, you can write regular Markdown files and HTML files, but you can also include $(interpolation)
to spice up your documents! For example:
# Hey there!
This is some *text*. Here is a very big number: $(1 + 1).
Besides small inline values, you can also write big code blocks, with $(begin ... end)
, and you can output HTML. Take a look at some of our files to learn more!
Pluto notebooks will be rendered to HTML and included in the page. What you see is what you get!
We are not running a slider server currently, but we will probably add it in the future!
Notebook outputs are cached (for a long time) by the file hash. This means that a notebook file will only ever run once, which makes it much faster to work on the website. If you need to re-run your notebook, add a space somewhere in the code :)
Web assets go through the system unchanged.
Like many SSG systems, we use front matter to add metadata to pages. In .jlmd
files, this is done with a front matter block, e.g.:
---
title: "🌼 How to install"
description: "Instructions to install Pluto.jl"
tags: ["docs", "introduction"]
layout: "md.jlmd"
---
# Let's install Pluto
here is how you do it
Every page should probably include:
title
: Will be used in the sidebar, on Google, in the window header, and on social media.description
: Will be used on hover, on Google, and on social media.tags
: List of tags that are used to create collections out of pages. Our sidebar uses collections to know which pages to list. (more details insidebar data.jl
)layout
: The name of a layout file insrc/_includes
. For basic Markdown or HTML, you probably wantmd.jlmd
. For Pluto, you should uselayout.jlhtml
.
For .jlmd
files, see the example above.
For .jl
notebooks, use the Frontmatter GUI built into Pluto.
For .jlhtml
, we still need to figure something out 😄.
Use PlutoPages.develop
to start developing your website. It will launch two browser tabs: one with the PlutoPages development dashboard, and one with a preview of your website.
When you make edits to the website source files, they should get detected automatically, and the site is regenerated. If changes are not detected, go to the PlutoPages dashboard and click "Read input files again".
import PlutoPages
# replace this with the path of your own website
my_site_source = PlutoPages.create_test_basic_site()
PlutoPages.develop(my_site_source)
Use PlutoPages.generate
if you want to generate your website once, without a development server.
import PlutoPages
# replace this with the path of your own website
my_site_source = PlutoPages.create_test_basic_site()
output_dir = PlutoPages.generate(my_site_source)
You need to manually run the notebook with Pluto:
- Go to this folder, and run
julia --project=pluto-deployment-environment
. Thenimport Pkg; Pkg.instantiate();
. import Pluto; Pluto.run()
and open thePlutoPages.jl
notebook in this repository. The first run can take some time, as it builds up the notebook outputs cache. Leave it running.- In a second terminal, go to this folder, and run
julia --project=pluto-deployment-environment
, then:import Deno_jll run(`$(Deno_jll.deno()) run --allow-read --allow-net https://deno.land/[email protected]/http/file_server.ts _site`)
- Go to the URL printed to your terminal.
- Whenever you edit a file, PlutoPages will automatically regenerate! Refresh your browser tab. If it does not pick up the change, go to the generation dashboard and click the "Read input files again" button.