content
content copied to clipboard
Add glossary for SSG
Fixes https://github.com/mdn/content/issues/34867
Preview URLs
/en-US/docs/Glossary/SSG/en-US/docs/Learn/Tools_and_testing/Client-side_JavaScript_frameworks/Introduction
External URLs (14)
URL: /en-US/docs/Glossary/SSG
Title: Static site generator (SSG)
- https://astro.build/ (1 time) (Note! This may be a new URL 👀)
- https://docusaurus.io/ (1 time) (Note! This may be a new URL 👀)
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Static_site_generator (1 time) (Note! This may be a new URL 👀)
- https://jekyllrb.com/ (1 time) (Note! This may be a new URL 👀)
- https://vitepress.dev/ (1 time) (Note! This may be a new URL 👀)
- https://wordpress.com/ (1 time) (Note! This may be a new URL 👀)
- https://www.11ty.dev/ (1 time) (Note! This may be a new URL 👀)
URL: /en-US/docs/Learn/Tools_and_testing/Client-side_JavaScript_frameworks/Introduction
Title: Introduction to client-side frameworks
- https://astro.build/ (1 time) (Note! This may be a new URL 👀)
- https://docusaurus.io/ (1 time) (Note! This may be a new URL 👀)
- https://gohugo.io/ (1 time) (Note! This may be a new URL 👀)
- https://jekyllrb.com/ (1 time) (Note! This may be a new URL 👀)
- https://vitepress.dev/ (1 time) (Note! This may be a new URL 👀)
- https://www.11ty.dev/ (1 time) (Note! This may be a new URL 👀)
- https://www.gatsbyjs.com/ (1 time) (Note! This may be a new URL 👀)
(comment last updated: 2024-09-01 23:09:57)
Fly by the comment: should we call this page "static site generator" instead of "SSG"? I would have looked up the former, not the latter. I think most of our readers who want to know what a static site generator is would too (and could still find it via SSG)
@estelle Most glossary entries I've seen use the abbreviation as the title. I assume one of the original intents of the glossary was to search for abbreviations and see what they mean.
@estelle Most glossary entries I've seen use the abbreviation as the title. I assume one of the original intents of the glossary was to search for abbreviations and see what they mean.
Why not "Static Site Generator (SSG)"?
Your assumption is reasonable, but both forms might well not be understood.