- Enable HTML minification
- Support `output_dir` in `config.toml`
- Allow sections to be drafted
- Allow specifying default language in filenames
- Render emoji in Markdown content if the `render_emoji` option is enabled
- Enable YouTube privacy mode for the YouTube shortcode
- Add language as class to the `<code>` block and as `data-lang`
- Add bibtex to `load_data`
- Add a `[markdown]` section to `config.toml` to configure rendering
- Add `highlight_code` and `highlight_theme` to a `[markdown]` section in `config.toml`
- Add `external_links_target_blank`, `external_links_no_follow` and `external_links_no_referrer`
- Add a `smart_punctuation` option in the `[markdown]` section in `config.toml` to turn elements like dots and dashes
into their typographic forms
- Add iteration count variable `nth` for shortcodes to know how many times a shortcode has been invoked in a given
content
- Update some highlighting syntaxes and the TS syntax will now be used instead of JS due to issues with it
- Remove `zola serve --watch-only`: since we build the HTML in memory and not on disk, it doesn't make sense anymore
- Update clojure syntax
- Prefer extra syntaxes to the default ones if we have a match for language
- Fix `zola serve` having issues with non-ascii paths
- 404 page now gets the site default language as `lang`
Bumped version because 2020-12-04 is not available on mirrors.
Tested server and client on NixOS x86_64 with sway/wayland.
Played some rounds with old and new maps on public servers.
The change to GCC 10 did break this package as it does some conversation
from 32bit integer to the type "int" which might be "narrower" depending
on the platform. By default GCC 10 errors in these cases. Since this
code is fine (and has been for a long time) it is okay to disable the
error in this case.
Sparkleshare requires 'sh' to be in its PATH, or push-operations fail. Its PATH consists of a single entry, which is configured in the postInstall phase. The bash-derivative includes 'sh', and adding it to the dependencies resolves the issue.
This is a program that just displays a static cat picture in a Wayland
window. I packaged it a while ago thinking it wouldn't be useful for
anybody else, but a conversation on IRC today made me realise it would
be!
hello-wayland is very useful as a minimal example when hacking on
Wayland ecosystem stuff -- even if Firefox doesn't work yet,
hello-wayland probably will and that can be useful to guide you in the
right direction!