I know many Ruby users are using Jekyll but I wonder what the benefits that will bring over RefineryCMS?
Could someone highlights the differences and pros/cons for each.
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I know many Ruby users are using Jekyll but I wonder what the benefits that will bring over RefineryCMS? Could someone highlights the differences and pros/cons for each.
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I'm one of the core developers on Refinery CMS. The architecture of each project is vastly different. Here's a few things Refinery CMS has:
I can't be authoritative about Jekyll (maybe mojombo can answer) but it looks like:
I hope that helps weigh it up. It all comes down to your project requirements. | |||
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Well, jekyll is 100% static. All files are generated into static HTML. Jekyll is amazing for small sites that don't really need dynamic content. With jekyll you write the content in your own text editor. I haven't tested RefineryCMS, but it is more like what you would think of as a content management system with data stored in a database managed through a web interface. If the site is going to be managed by non-tech people, I'll say jekyll is a no-go and that refinery is a better choice. | |||
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RefineryCMS is fully Rails 3.0 compatible and they offer great support over IRC. Furthermore RefineryCMS is a fully featured CMS with a localizable interface while Jekyl is not. It all depends on your projects needs. | ||||
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The best thing to do would be to install them both and play. You will soon see they both serve two completely different purposes. Refinery is a CMS and Jekyll is a static site generator . Jekyll is not built for content management. | |||
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