![]() And then you can look into how you wanna set up your blog wether it's done cms or a static generator line jekyll with theming and just set it up to take in your content with the correct styles in place Now if you want to write your content with the correct 'tags' (more likely going to be classes if you are going to go beyond default HTML tags) all you need is something like text expander or espanso which will convert you ' abbreviations' or tagged as you write or just insert them. So basically ia template is not going to convert anything visually in a browser so its redundant. at the end of the day the template in ia won't matter because css (or ur front end framework that converts to css) is what is going to be handling the styling of your elements and how they are rendered. Take this with a grain of salt as i am only a hobbyist when it comes to web development but i think you are overthinking it. After using iA Writer, I don't want to write in anything else. Thanks if you read this far, and huge thanks to iA Writer developers. ![]() I can't wait to write everything in Markdown-ish and just use custom templates to quickly export various types of beautiful content, but I know this will be a project (or several projects). Resources? Steps? ('learn CSS, HTML, and then.'?) in addition iA template github, which is great, but. Is this something I could/should try to do with iA Templates, or if I should just go straight to Pandoc?īonus question: Anyone have thoughts about best ways for beginners with limited code knowledge to learn to work with templates in either iA or Pandoc in a well-structured way? (i.e. I think Pandoc can do this, but I'd love to convert more quickly and simply with a iA Writer custom template, if feasible. see crazy 'h3' div design (starts with a giant '1' in a circle) in attached image.įinally, it would be amazing, for later edits, if the HTML could get converted right back into 'my Markdown.' As I type this, I'm realizing that I might want to create my own flavour of Markdown, plus more advanced templates. I'll want to get pretty fancy with this, ideally, with certain keywords applying 3 different styles, in sequence, based on line returns, etc. "bcq" "rft", etc.) and then, upon conversion, the template (or if I can / need to define my own preprocessing routines?) can expand these into the final blog HTML output, but leave the md/plain text more human-readable. Wondering if iA writer templates work in such a way that I can type small keyword strings of letters (i.e. rather than long-ish HTML tags, also not using snippets, unless I have to-again, for human-readability). Hoping to start a blog with a lot of styles(?) classes(?) not covered in Markdown (see attached layout), and wanted to use my own system of short character strings to keep the MD as human-readable as possible (i.e. ![]() First, I don't know much about code and templates but confident and ambitious in terms of being able to learn (and know it will take time.)-but feel free to ask about and/or correct any poor vocabulary or missassumptions I make here in trying to explain my goals.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |