Slate with node.js
A port of the documentation generator Slate to node.js, that can optionally be built in the browser. See it in action!
The major difference is the use of marked for parsing the .md, highlight for syntax highlighting, and Handlebars for templating.
This outputs to the build
directory. Replace source/slate.md
with your own markdown to use that instead
git clone https://github.com/jmanek/slate_node.git
npm install
npm run build
# Docs are now viewable at build/index.html
Alternatively, you can directly serve the source
directory from a webhost and the documentation will be built at runtime.
git clone https://github.com/jmanek/slate_node.git
npm install serve # included in npm install
./node_modules/.bin/serve source
# Docs are now viewable at localhost:5000
Any changes to source/slate.md
will be incorporated into source/index.html
when it is reloaded. There is now no need to have node.js installed on the machine. This way you don't have to worry about incorpoting Slate into your current build process or creating an entirely new toolchain for it (python3 -m http.server
). It is a "static" version of Slate. This is inherently slower than the node.js pre-built version, but it is completely independent of operating system or platform. You will not be able to view the documentation until deploying it to a server.
Numerous themes for highlight.js are available in source/stylesheets/highlight
. You can switch between them by changing this line in source/index.html
<link href="stylesheets/highlight/solarized-dark.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />
Includes are handled as described in the Slate Wiki. The filename must have an underscore prepended to it, which is not included in the markdown file description.
- Package it in a more modular way (Grunt?)
- marked seems to be handling tables a bit differently, if there's too many em-dashes it's failing
- highlight.js might have some differences in language detection than Rouge; at the very least 'shell' becomes 'bash'. Ideally this repo should be compatible with any markdown made for Ruby Slate.
- Cleanup how marked parses the top-level settings. Right now they are manually being parsed.
- Actually build the scss/js