Having not read the whole thread I apologize if I'm retracing already covered ground. I've had success using Org's built in projects [1]. Although this results in a flat html web-site it is easy to impose a consistent theme, and to publish large numbers of files. To give some personal examples my homepage [2], and even the wiki for my lab [3] are both published using Org-mode's publishing facilities, the latter with a git repository backend and some fancy post_update hooks. For smaller sites (like my home page) I just include the project definition in an elisp block in a commented heading of the main Org-mode file (e.g., [4]), and for larger efforts I define the projects in a separate elisp file, or even in an external script which can be run with an Emacs batch instance. Hope this helps. Best -- Eric 'Mash writes: > Quoting William Gardella : > >> 'Mash writes: >> >>> Quoting Thomas Herbert : >>>> Kyle Sexton mocker.org> writes: >>>> >>>>> I'm looking for advice on ways people are publishing their org notes >>>>> to a website. So far I've looked at blorgit and it's really nice, but >>>>> the dependency for a backend emacs session and running through sinatra >>>>> makes me wary of putting it out on my server for the world. >>>>> >>>>> 1. What methods are people using to publish their org notes? >>>>> 2. Anyone have sample sites that I can see what the output looks like? >>>> >>>> Kyle, >>>> >>>> I have been actually been working on a simple clean solution for >>>> writing in org-mode and keeping the file as org-mode. What I have >>>> come up with is a "Textile" like PHP class that translates org-mode >>>> files into HTML. >>>> >>>> It is still very very alpha and hope to release the code soon for >>>> people to look at, work and improve or completely scrap and take my >>>> idea and do it better. >>> >>> As I mentioned earlier I have been playing around building a regex >>> parser in PHP for Org-Mode files. As you will see I am obviously an >>> amateur programmer and my hope is that if this is at all useful then >>> someone else will rewrite it. My site http://toshine.org uses both the >>> classOrgile and the Orgile CMS. If you look at the bottom of any >>> article you will see the link to the raw .org file that is >>> parsed/converted to HTML. >>> >>> --- >>> The classOrgile PHP class (very limited currently!). >>> http://toshine.org/etc/files/classorgile.php.txt >>> >>> The Orgile PHP flat file CMS (currently used for http://toshine.org). >>> http://toshine.org/etc/files/orgile.php.txt >>> >>> The Orgile PHP flat file CMS (fully commented code). >>> http://toshine.org/etc/files/orgile-commented.php.txt >>> --- >>> >>> Well I hope it is at least interesting for someone on this list. >>> >>> 'Mash >> >> Limited though it may be, I'm extremely impressed with the results you >> are getting out of this little flat-file CMS :) >> >> It seems like a more "blog" (periodical literature)-like solution than >> Blorgit, which in spite of its name is really a wiki framework. I think >> I'll be trying this in my sandbox soon :) >> >> Will >> >> > > Thanks Will, and do let me know if you need any help deciphering my > code. It looks a lot better in php-mode! > It really is actually a very simple program, and really easy to remove > what you don't need and add what you want. > You have my email address so pop me a line whenever. > > Thanks > > 'Mash > > > > > Footnotes: [1] http://orgmode.org/manual/Publishing.html [2] http://cs.unm.edu/~eschulte/ [3] http://wiki.adaptive.cs.unm.edu/ [4] the attached snippet of org-mode is adapted from my homepage.