Because GitHub's README styling is actually really nice
Background
If you have a little side project, often you might want a simple landing page. The GitHub README rendering is really beautifully done: clean, simple and modern. The official GitHub markdown to HTML API generates the HTML code, but not the stylesheets necessary to make it look nice.
Using your GitHub README as the main landing point works great for open source projects, where your visitors are developers and are familiar with GitHub, as well as you have all the text right where the code, the Issues and PRs are. But for some projects this isn't ideal. I built this project within a few hours for myself to get WalkWithFriends off the ground fast, without investing in building an actual website, or using a bloated website builder.
Some issues you run into when using GitHub as your main landing page
Maybe your project isn't actually an open source project, so you can't just host a README on GitHub
If you want to link to just the README, you could append #readme to your browser URL (making the URL less pretty), or the visitor has to know they have to scroll down
The mobile page of GitHub is still pretty bad, and it only renders the first few lines, as soon as you have a logo and badges on your page, it doesn't render at all, unless the visitor hits View all of README.md
Non-tech visitors don't know what's a README.md
The button is small, and people don't know what is
GitHub renders the GitHub Pulse below, something that doens't make sense for non-tech visitors
The URL changes from something nice like github.com/krausefx/fastlane to github.com/krausefx/fastlane/blob/master/README.md, meaning you can either link directly to this page to have a nice content, or you link to the root page and have the downside of the extra buttons
Nat announced, that they working on improving the mobile experience, which is great news for everybody :)
You can't use your own domain
If you use your own domain, you have to use GitHub Pages (which is excellent btw), but then you have to have HTML files ready, which is exactly what this project solves.
Solution
A simple script that converts a markdown (.md) file to a single HTML file, that includes all the HTML and CSS code inline, so you can host it anywhere.
There is no need to use this script if you already convert your markdown file to HTML, you can directly use the stylesheet of this repo.
How it works
This project doesn't actually use the GitHub stylesheet, it's far too complex, and has legal implications.
Inject the GitHub-like CSS code at the bottom of the page
Resulting you get an HTML file that contains everything needed, so you can host the page on GitHub pages, AWS S3, Google Cloud Storage or anywhere else.
This will read the README.md from your current working directory and output the resulting HTML as README.html in the same directory.
Open tasks
Check out the open issues, in particular code blocks currently don't support syntax highlighting, however that's something that's rather easy to add. For a minimalistic stylesheet we could take the styles from krausefx.com css.
请发表评论