The document compares the characteristics of static and dynamic websites for several sites including Jekyllrb.com, Wikipedia.org, Metalsmith.io, Hexo.io, Facebook.com, and Getpelican.com. Jekyllrb.com is static and built with Ruby for blogs and projects on GitHub. Wikipedia.org is dynamic and allows custom templates, actions, logging, and adding new data. Metalsmith.io is static and uses user-defined plugins to build sites simply. Hexo.io is also static but uses Node.js for fast rendering of extremely large sites. Facebook.com is classified as dynamic as it can generate changing content through client-side or server-side scripting
The document compares the characteristics of static and dynamic websites for several sites including Jekyllrb.com, Wikipedia.org, Metalsmith.io, Hexo.io, Facebook.com, and Getpelican.com. Jekyllrb.com is static and built with Ruby for blogs and projects on GitHub. Wikipedia.org is dynamic and allows custom templates, actions, logging, and adding new data. Metalsmith.io is static and uses user-defined plugins to build sites simply. Hexo.io is also static but uses Node.js for fast rendering of extremely large sites. Facebook.com is classified as dynamic as it can generate changing content through client-side or server-side scripting
The document compares the characteristics of static and dynamic websites for several sites including Jekyllrb.com, Wikipedia.org, Metalsmith.io, Hexo.io, Facebook.com, and Getpelican.com. Jekyllrb.com is static and built with Ruby for blogs and projects on GitHub. Wikipedia.org is dynamic and allows custom templates, actions, logging, and adding new data. Metalsmith.io is static and uses user-defined plugins to build sites simply. Hexo.io is also static but uses Node.js for fast rendering of extremely large sites. Facebook.com is classified as dynamic as it can generate changing content through client-side or server-side scripting
jekyllrb.com Jekyll is built with Ruby, and is most often used for blogs and personal projects, due to its close integration with GitHub. www.wikipedia.org Dynamic websites are examples like Wikibooks, Wikipedia, or blog portals. They allow the usage of custom templates and actions in the server- site, such as logging and adding new data. metalsmith.io That’s because Metalsmith is extremely simple — it’s a collection of user- defined plugins. Hexo.io Hexo is a build tool created with nodeJS, which allows for super speedy rendering, even with extremely large sites. https://www.facebook.com/ According to above discussion we can say that facebook is a dynamic website. A website or web page, would be static or dynamic. ... A dynamic website can contain client-side scripting or server-side scripting to generate the changing content in back-end, or a combination of both scripting types. getpelican.com Pelican is a static site generator written in Python. Content can be written in Markdown or reStructuredText formats, and can be published in multiple languages.