This is the repository of the website expressjs.com. It is hosted directly from the repository as a GitHub Pages website.
To preview the website locally:
-
Install Ruby and Bundler if you don't have them already.
-
Install the jekyll-redirect-from gem:
$ gem install jekyll-redirect-from
-
Clone this repository by running the following command:
$ git clone https://github.com/expressjs/expressjs.com.git
-
Navigate to the cloned repository directory and run the following command:
$ bundle install
Bundler will look in the Gemfile for which gems to install. The
github-pages
gem includes the same version of Jekyll and other dependencies as used by GitHub Pages, so that your local setup mirrors GitHub Pages as closely as possible. -
Run Jekyll using the following command:
$ bundle exec jekyll serve
Then, load http://localhost:4000 in your browser.
Tip
You can run make help
to obtain detailed information on how to use our make commands.
- Ensure that you have Docker and Make installed.
- Run
make build
to build the project. - Run
make serve
to serve the project, this include live reloading so any change will be reflected (it can take a while, check the logs). - Run
make clean
to remove the docker images and resources generated.
Jekyll uses a variant of Markdown known as Kramdown.
Jekyll uses the Liquid template engine for templating.
You can use GFM fenced code blocks for JavaScript; for example:
```js var express = require('express') var app = express() app.listen(3000) ```
The result looks like this:
const express = require('express')
const app = express()
app.listen(3000)
The default GitHub Pages syntax highlighting has been disabled in _config.yml
to allow highlighting with prism.js.
Feel free to make changes to the template files or the document files. The supporting docs are located in their respective directories, and the API docs are located under the _includes
directory.
Please see the Contributors' Guide for more information on contributing to the documentation, including information on contributing translations.
Jekyll comes built-in with GitHub Pages. Since we are already using GitHub Pages to host the website, it makes sense to leverage the capabilities it provides. It's all about using the right tool, for the right job, under the right circumstances.