I've not really posted anything on my #blog for a while, and one of the reasons was that every time I tried to, I ended up having to work on catching up on a bunch of #hugo changes before the blog would build because inevitable on one of my four "main" machines, the blog wouldn't build due to some backward-incompatible changes.

Any recommendation for a static site generator that takes backward compatibility a bit more seriously? I've used #Jekyll in the past but I haven't looked into the state of that ecosystem for years.

My strong preference would be for a static site generator written in #clojure, #ClojureScript, #CommonLisp or #emacslisp. Preferably one that integrates well with #isso for comments.

Not interested in a more "dynamic" system like Ghost - I moved away from WordPress quite a while ago to reduce the amount of maintenance and attack surface, and I don't want to go back.

@tgeusch I have been using Cryogen for years now. That's Clojure based! I happily write ASCIIDoc files and it produces a nice site for me.
@Nundrum thanks - Cryogen was on my radar already, so I'll definitely also keep it in mind.
@tgeusch both my own blog https://corfield.org and the #Clojure Guides site https://clojure-doc.org are powered by Cryogen and I'm very happy with it @Nundrum
An Architect's View

Clojure, Software Design, Frameworks and more...

@seancorfield @tgeusch @Nundrum I also use #Cryogen for my own blog and for other websites I currently support; I've contributed some code back to the project and I will contribute more. As a simple way of generating lightweight websites it's a real winner.

Thanks, @yogthos!

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