Jekyll (software)

Ruby-based static website generator From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jekyll (software)

Jekyll is a static site generator written in Ruby by Tom Preston-Werner. It is distributed under the open source MIT license.

Quick Facts Developer(s), Initial release ...
Jekyll
Developer(s)Tom Preston-Werner, Nick Quaranto, Parker Moore, Alfred Xing, Olivia Hugger, Frank Taillandier, Pat Hawks, Matt Rogers
Initial releaseNovember 5, 2008; 16 years ago (2008-11-05)[1]
Stable release
4.4.1[2] / 29 January 2025; 2 months ago (29 January 2025)
Repository
Written inRuby
Operating systemCross-platform
PlatformWeb
TypeBlog publishing system
LicenseMIT License
Websitejekyllrb.com
Close

History

Jekyll was first released by Tom Preston-Werner in 2008.[3] Jekyll was later taken over by Parker Moore, an employee of GitHub who led the release of Jekyll 1.[4]

Jekyll started a web development trend towards static websites.[5] As of 2017 Jekyll was ranked the most popular static site generator, largely due to its adoption by GitHub. The Jekyll project on GitHub continues to be updated and releases are being made for bug fixes.

Features

Jekyll renders Markdown or Textile and Liquid templates, and produces a complete, static website ready to be served by Apache HTTP Server, Nginx or another web server.[6] Static site generators do not use databases to generate the pages dynamically. Instead Jekyll supports loading content from YAML, JSON, CSV, and TSV files into the Liquid templating system.[7] Jekyll has built in support, and is selectable as the build engine by default, in GitHub Pages,[8] a GitHub feature that allows users to host websites based on their GitHub public repositories for no additional cost.

Jekyll can be used in combination with front-end frameworks such as Bootstrap.[9] Jekyll sites can be connected to cloud-based CMS software such as CloudCannon, Forestry, or Siteleaf, enabling content editors to modify site content without having to know how to code.[10]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.