{ "uuid": [ { "value": "2142e27d-5c96-4c16-9650-dc47b2b85888" } ], "langcode": [ { "value": "en" } ], "type": [ { "target_id": "daily_email", "target_type": "node_type", "target_uuid": "8bde1f2f-eef9-4f2d-ae9c-96921f8193d7" } ], "revision_timestamp": [ { "value": "2025-05-11T09:00:00+00:00" } ], "revision_uid": [ { "target_type": "user", "target_uuid": "b8966985-d4b2-42a7-a319-2e94ccfbb849" } ], "revision_log": [], "status": [ { "value": true } ], "uid": [ { "target_type": "user", "target_uuid": "b8966985-d4b2-42a7-a319-2e94ccfbb849" } ], "title": [ { "value": "Static websites are easy to build" } ], "created": [ { "value": "2025-03-12T00:00:00+00:00" } ], "changed": [ { "value": "2025-05-11T09:00:00+00:00" } ], "promote": [ { "value": false } ], "sticky": [ { "value": false } ], "default_langcode": [ { "value": true } ], "revision_translation_affected": [ { "value": true } ], "path": [ { "alias": "\/daily\/2025\/03\/12\/easy", "langcode": "en" } ], "body": [ { "value": "\n
Static websites are the easiest way to build websites.<\/p>\n\n
You create an index.html file, type some words, open the file in a browser and you'll see the words you entered.<\/p>\n\n
You built a website!<\/p>\n\n
Then you can create any more pages you need and style it with CSS.<\/p>\n\n
This how I built my first website, for a Tae Kwon-Do school I used to train at.<\/p>\n\n
This worked great, but at some point, becomes hard to scale.<\/p>\n\n
What if you want to add a new link to your navigation menu? You'd need to update each HTML page separately.<\/p>\n\n
At this point, I started to learn about PHP and MySQL, and then Drupal.<\/p>\n\n
Static site generators like Sculpin, Jekyll and Hugo also fix this problem.<\/p>\n\n
They allow you to write HTML files with a template language like Twig and use includes, loops and conditions to make your files easier to create and maintain with a language and tools you're familiar with.<\/p>\n\n
It still generates a static website with HTML files, but in a more maintainable way.<\/p>\n\n
As a PHP Developer, I like Sculpin but also like Tome to export a Drupal website to static HTML.<\/p>\n\n ", "format": "full_html", "processed": "\n
Static websites are the easiest way to build websites.<\/p>\n\n
You create an index.html file, type some words, open the file in a browser and you'll see the words you entered.<\/p>\n\n
You built a website!<\/p>\n\n
Then you can create any more pages you need and style it with CSS.<\/p>\n\n
This how I built my first website, for a Tae Kwon-Do school I used to train at.<\/p>\n\n
This worked great, but at some point, becomes hard to scale.<\/p>\n\n
What if you want to add a new link to your navigation menu? You'd need to update each HTML page separately.<\/p>\n\n
At this point, I started to learn about PHP and MySQL, and then Drupal.<\/p>\n\n
Static site generators like Sculpin, Jekyll and Hugo also fix this problem.<\/p>\n\n
They allow you to write HTML files with a template language like Twig and use includes, loops and conditions to make your files easier to create and maintain with a language and tools you're familiar with.<\/p>\n\n
It still generates a static website with HTML files, but in a more maintainable way.<\/p>\n\n
As a PHP Developer, I like Sculpin but also like Tome to export a Drupal website to static HTML.<\/p>\n\n ", "summary": null } ], "feeds_item": [ { "imported": "1970-01-01T00:33:45+00:00", "guid": null, "hash": "898a4ca4ca6f3d15e2c342efb0420bee", "target_type": "feeds_feed", "target_uuid": "90c85284-7ca8-4074-9178-97ff8384fe76" } ] }