I was hoping to avoid testing a lot of different systems, spending time there.
So that's why I'm asking here. I don't need a guide to create a website, maybe a refresher on some topics. Ideally I'd want a static site generator that makes it easy and quick to create a website which is pretty, accessible, works across browsers and standards compliant and doesn't freeze the browser on a low-end phone. And where it is easy to override using for example plain or template HTML, or extend programmatic features using some plugins or just subclassing. Do you know of a XML DTD for HTML5 by the way? -Morten Blogging at http://blogologue.com Tweeting at https://twitter.com/blogologue On Instagram https://instagram.com/morphexx tir. 13. aug. 2019, 11.39 skrev DL Neil <pythonl...@danceswithmice.info>: > On 13/08/19 10:01 AM, Morten W. Petersen wrote: > > On 12.08.2019 18:13, Brian Oney wrote: > >> On August 12, 2019 9:14:55 AM GMT+02:00, morphex <morp...@gmail.com> > >> wrote: > >>> Hi. > >>> What frameworks are there for generating static web pages in Python? > >> I have used: > >> https://github.com/Frozen-Flask/Frozen-Flask > >> It's pretty simple. Develop with flask and then "freeze" it. > >> > >> I am looking forward to further answers. > > > > OK, so now I know Flask can freeze applications. With Zope and Plone, I > > have a lot of what I need in terms of web application development. > > > > What I guess I'm looking for, is something that will help create a > > static website, in a simple and efficient manner. Without being bloated. > > Which have you examined and rejected/like? > > > > I don't have a lot of hair on my head, but I would be pulling it out > > because of some of the websites I see today, their heavy-handed use of > > different Javascript frameworks etc. > > True! > > > > How would I go about creating a simple website with a front page, an > > about page, a product page and a contact page? Without any server-side > > handling of data, so it could be entirely served by for example Apache. > > There are a thousand and one web-sites and training courses which > discuss these topics! > > > > And with it having well-formed XHTML, proper CSS, little Javascript, > > scaling to different screen and web browsers (wow, it's been so long I > > forgot it was called responsive design) and so on, being a nice little > > package. > > Don't even think about XHTML. HTML5! > > Yes, "responsive". > > > As said, there's plenty 'out there'. Today's InBox included reference to > <<<pelican > Static site generator that supports Markdown and reST syntax. Powered by > Python.>>> > https://github.com/getpelican > > It seems they make good use of a number of Python features, which will > presumably reduce learning-time for Pythonista! > -- > Regards =dn > -- > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list > -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list