In goes content, out comes a website, ready to deploy.
Static websites are safer, use fewer resources, and avoid vendor and platform lock-in. You can read more about this in the Nikola Handbook.
It has many features, but here are some of the nicer ones:
- Blogs, with tags, feeds, archives, comments, etc.
- Themable
- Fast builds, thanks to doit
- Flexible, extensible via plugins
- Small codebase (programmers can understand all of Nikola core in a day)
- reStructuredText or Markdown as input language (also Wiki, BBCode, Textile, and HTML)
- Easy image galleries (just drop files in a folder!)
- Syntax highlighting for almost any programming language or markup
- Multilingual sites, translated to 13 languages.
- Doesn't reinvent wheels, leverages existing tools.
- Python 2 and 3 compatible.
Assuming you have pip installed::
git clone git://github.com/ralsina/nikola.git
cd nikola
pip install .
Optionally (for markdown and lots of other features):
pip install -r requirements.txt
For even more stuff, like tests and very optional features:
pip install -r requirements-full.txt
For more information, see http://getnikola.com