Find out how to create and organize your content quickly and intuitively in LoveIt theme.| LoveIt
Over the last few months, I’d become embarrassed to share my blog posts, particularly image-heavy posts, as I was handling responsive images so badly. The images were all huge and it was my only big barrier in web performance (no tracking here!). With an archive of blog posts going back nearly a decade, it was going to be a big job to get my whole site working consistently, but I had an inkling I might be able to do it with Hugo’s Image Processing.| laurakalbag.com
Before you start your blog, you have to perform a set of essential choices – topics you want to write about, domain name, and the way you’ll publish your content. I choose the self-hosted WordPress platform with a slightly customized theme that I found on the Internet. After more than two years of blogging, I migrated all my content to Hugo. In this article, I would like to show you why I decided to move on from WordPress to Hugo – a static page generator.| Szymon Krajewski
I’ve moved my blog content build to hugo more than a year ago, but I still forget how to achieve some basic things in Hugo or where to find them in the docs. I’ve put together this cheatsheet to help me later on. I hope it’ll benefit you as well.| Mátyás Budavári
Hugo assumes that the same structure that works to organize your source content is used to organize the rendered site.| gohugo.io
This site is built using the Hugo static site generator. Hugo is awesome. Its documentation is not. That is my personal opinion :) This post explains why I find the existing documentation so frustrating and how it could be improved.| Sagar Behere