siteleaf.com
Taxonomy in Siteleaf - Siteleaf
http://www.siteleaf.com/blog/taxonomy-in-siteleaf
Jul 13, 2013. This post refers to a legacy version of Siteleaf. Last week, I wrote about metadata. And the variety of ways you could use it to customize your website. In this post, I’ll do the same, but with metadata’s much cooler, older brother taxonomy. Li a href=" {. Let’s start by looking at the code involved for listing a set of tags. In the code above, we’re creating a template for our individual blog posts. Because the object tied to our template is a post, we can access the. For the text and.
siteleaf.com
Blog - Siteleaf
http://www.siteleaf.com/blog
Aug 12, 2016. We’re happy to be included by GitHub in the official GitHub Integrations Directory. Connect your website repo with Siteleaf and your Markdown content is editable in a friendly CMS designed with non-technical writers and clients in mind. Build sites using the tools you love, and make it easy to others to contribute without having to write code or understand Git. Visit the Siteleaf integration. And start using Siteleaf as a CMS for your Jekyll and GitHub Pages sites today. Aug 04, 2016. The P...
siteleaf.com
Metadata in Siteleaf - Siteleaf
http://www.siteleaf.com/blog/metadata-in-siteleaf
Jul 07, 2013. This post refers to a legacy version of Siteleaf. For my personal website. In our first example, we specify a metadata key. Notice how Siteleaf displays the correct syntax of this metadata in the lower right. You’ll find these syntax helpers below every input field in Siteleaf’s UI. Style a { color: {. Then, inside the. Tag of our default template, we create a. Tag and set the base link color to our metadata value. The keyword. Note Siteleaf uses the shorter keyword. Style a { color: {.
siteleaf.com
Developing sites and themes - Siteleaf
http://www.siteleaf.com/blog/developing-sites
Developing sites and themes. Jul 11, 2013. This post refers to a legacy version of Siteleaf. Watch Developing sites and themes. In this video, we show you how to create Siteleaf themes using Liquid. And develop sites locally using the Siteleaf Ruby Gem. Watch this tutorial on Vimeo. Also see: Getting started with Siteleaf.
v1.siteleaf.com
Siteleaf v1 Docs
http://v1.siteleaf.com/help
A new Siteleaf is here, upgrade to v2 →. Managing your Siteleaf site. These documents refer to an outdated version of Siteleaf, and are provided for archival purposes. For help with the latest version of Siteleaf, including how to upgrade your legacy site, see learn.siteleaf.com. 2016 Siteleaf is made by Oak.
siteleaf.com
Plans - Siteleaf
http://www.siteleaf.com/plans
New sites start with a free 14 day trial on the Personal plan. Upgrade or downgrade anytime. Sync and publish to public. Slack channel and docs. Sync and publish to private. Publish to Amazon S3, Rackspace, FTP. Preview your site online before publishing. Email us your questions. Admin, Publisher, Writer. Increased build time limit for complex sites. Priority position in the publish queue. Move to the top of the queue. How do subscriptions work? Each new site you create starts with a free 14 day trial.
siteleaf.com
Markdown in Siteleaf - Siteleaf
http://www.siteleaf.com/blog/markdown-in-siteleaf
Jul 29, 2013. This post refers to a legacy version of Siteleaf. In the last Siteleaf. Post, we explored taxonomy. And the many ways you could use it to extend your website. This time, we’ll break from templating and take a closer look at content specifically, Markdown’s role in Siteleaf. If you develop for the web and haven’t heard of Markdown. Yet, I’m going to have to ask you to leave. As described by its originator, John Gruber. For a selection of text we’d like to bold, we can type. With the support ...
siteleaf.com
Purpose - Siteleaf
http://www.siteleaf.com/purpose
We believe that content management shouldn’t be hard. That you should be able to host your website wherever you want. That websites should be able to outlive their CMS. Our tools should be simple, but never dumbed down. Static sites are faster, more secure, and keep visitors happy. And speed matters: According to Google, nearly half of all visitors will leave a mobile site if the pages don’t load within 3 seconds.