Hi Marcin,

Thanks for your reply. It is always good to learn severaly solutions.

From now, I have used 
[org-export-head](https://github.com/itf/org-export-head), that sounds very 
similar to org clive. It still works and it is easy to use.
Nevertheless, all in one org-file is not so easy to maintain. But if I do not 
succeed with org-publish (which is not so easy, IMHO), I'll be back with 
org-export-head or maybe org clive.

Thanks !
Jo.

---
https://www.vidal-rosset.net

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Le mercredi 20 août 2025 à 17:28, mb...@mbork.pl mb...@mbork.pl a écrit :

> On 2025-08-20, at 09:29, Joseph Vidal-Rosset jos...@vidal-rosset.net wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>> The official documentation apart, is there a publish.el to follow to get an 
>> efficient setup to use emacs only for an academic
>> blog?
>>
>> Diego blog and this web page is nice: 
>> https://diego.codes/post/blogging-with-org/ but insufficiently detailed for 
>> me.
>
> Probably not exactly what you're looking for, but my Org-Clive
> (https://gitlab.com/mbork_mbork_pl/org-clive, see also two blog posts,
> https://mbork.pl/2023-07-22_Org_Clive_-_a_new_Org-mode-based_blogging_engine
> and https://mbork.pl/2025-01-13_A_minor_Org_Clive_improvement) is
> a minimalistic blogging engine written on top of Org mode in about 300
> lines of code. The three main features of Org Clive are (a) simplicity,
> (b) rudimentary support for rss generation and (c) the fact that the
> whole blog (including things like HTML templates, CSS styling or JS
> scripts - everything but binary assets) is generated from a single Org
> file.
>
> Hth,
>
> --
> Marcin Borkowski
> https://mbork.pl
> https://crimsonelevendelightpetrichor.net/

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