We've all experienced it.
Websites suddenly becoming slow for no reason, loading times in the double digits, or even the dreaded "Error establishi...
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I am confused, did I miss the part where you simply cache pages on WordPress so you don’t hit the database?
I mean they even make the plugins for page caching “non tech” friendly, unlike SSGs.
I mean that is the whole argument for a static site generator presented here, that you are serving static files?
Other than cost, which is a valid reason for micro sites, distribution to CDNs and not needing a database are the big winds for SSG surely?
Don’t get me wrong I am not a fan of WordPress but I have seen it run sites that have thousands of visitors on modest hardware.
Wordpress sites are slow due to crappy plugin choices, bloated themes etc. It is not WP itself that is slow and trust me I have seen enough sites on SSG be slow as well as the front end tends to be the bottleneck.
Yeah, but I sort of feel that caching is like dealing with the symptoms of the problem instead of the underlying problem (if that makes sense). I do agree with the fact that SSGs are not for everyone, but developers might work better with them than WordPress
A static site generator is literally a site like wordpress but with an extra build step. Wordpress + caching takes that build step away.
If you ignore all the problems with WordPress, then yeah.
I hear you on that. Jamstack is missing the great user experience that WordPress enjoy in exange for developer's experience. Headless CMSs are closing the gap, but there's still a big gap there. Especially in regards of dynamic data rendering. On the other hand, I sees amazing possibilities from decoupling the front-end from the data/API. This is where I'm investing and I feel there is so much that remains to be seen in that area.
The problem is that a major cache plug-in for WP just released an update with a bug that broke caching in an impossible to debug manner. This just isn't an issue with SSGs. Plus there are plugin vulnerabilities, etc.
"No-one" is talking about one of the biggest and most mainstream trends in web development over the last several years?
My exact same thought 😂
Funny because static site generation was the first big trend on the web back in the mid 90s.
It was abandoned for more complex stuff and because of improving code stacks. But it's still a very valid strategy where it can work and for very heavily hit sites.
You can even make it work with comment sections. (Slashdot for the longest time statically generated their site)
What you do is take in comments, but don't show them till some time passes and your site is regenerated. The advantage of that approach is that the site is always up, and site generation is independent of current load.. if it takes longer.. oh well.. so be it.. but the site is still up).
😂😂I'll be more careful with my titles next time
React: Gatsby, Next.js
Vue.js: Nuxs.js
Used all of those frameworks for SSG with Wordpress, Contentful or Strapi as a back-end. It's totally worth learning.
It's good to list simple ones. And then there's this one github.com/sake92/hepek. I like going a bit outside of popular and try to research really unknown. But to be honest in this case it's a friend who started it. Cool thing in here for me is that it's mostly developer oriented so you I guess it might be easier then learning some markup language or so.
Ive configured wordpress websites to load in less than a second with assets it is easy to tweak there are even plugins who help you do auto minify and file concatanation. Database connection also comes from poorly designed network if you make sure your database is on same server or same country you wont get that issue unless you host is down but then that would also be an issue for static websites.
Then lets talk plugins wordpress being there and established for so long you have huge plugins like WooCommerce that let you start e-commerce websites very easily and configure everything in real time.
And I disagree a lot of people are using static site generator but usually for portfolios and more. Also take time into consideration. If im someone not tech savy and just want a small website for my business with Wordpress you signup, configure and in 5 minutes you are up and running.
They target different audience and different needs.
Let me tell you my story of SSG, I have chosen Jekyll with GitHub pages 3 years back. I used to write Markdown in my local machine, then used to push code to GitHub pages. Then sometimes, I wanted to write a blog post but I wasn't on my development machine. Now I use some Static CMS to tackle this.
Conclusion is, SSG softwares aren't popular because they are currently targetted to developers only.
I think the headline is misleading.
I'm not a big fan of Wordpress to be honest but it serves a completely different purpose and is a completely different tool. SSGs can be used to create websites for yourself as a developer, for other developers (and can be hosted on a platform like GitHub so others can easily contribute) or in combination with a CMS. A CMS on the other hand can be used for and sometimes even from non-technical folks like clients and you host them easily on shared hosting.
Have you ever made a site with Hugo?
No, I've only used GatsbyJS.
I don't think you need to know Go to use Hugo.
Really nice post. I also setup my blog with a static page generator. I use Pelican, because I like Python. In my last post I explain how I publish it with Jenkins.
I am using hugo for:
I like it very much! Kudos to the Development Team!
Go Gridsome. Use Wordpress for content management (if you reeaaly have to) and publish static website!
If tailwind css is a option primo.af is a nice static site generator cms.
I recommend t3mpl.n4no.com/ It's similar to Jekyll, but it needs only browser (or CLI).
epsi-rns.gitlab.io/ssg/2020/10/11/...
I recently wrote a post on the similar topic - abhinav.co/static-websites
Another source to know more about static site generators: devopedia.org/static-site-generators
Nice Article, very helpful, Keep going !