I'm a fan of Open Source and have a growing interest in serverless and edge computing. I'm not a big fan of spiders, but they're doing good work eating bugs. I also stream on Twitch.
The only issues I’ve found so far are the styling of embeds coming from DEV. They’re in iframes, so you can style them to fit your blog. I’ll get around to sorting that out at some point though. It involves a rework of how embeds stylings work in the platform.
Data-scientist who loves to use #datascienceforgood, especially in ecology, energy and the environment. Bonsai, gardening, bikes and music when I'm not at a keyboard.
Been using this solution for my website, and found the same thing. Very happy with 99% of how it operates. Glad to know covering off that last 1% niggle is on the cards!
I'm a fan of Open Source and have a growing interest in serverless and edge computing. I'm not a big fan of spiders, but they're doing good work eating bugs. I also stream on Twitch.
I flipped the idea and went with using DEV as a headless CMS. More on that here. 👇
DEV as a Headless CMS for your Gatsby Site
Nick Taylor (he/him) ・ Apr 15 ・ 3 min read
The only issues I’ve found so far are the styling of embeds coming from DEV. They’re in iframes, so you can style them to fit your blog. I’ll get around to sorting that out at some point though. It involves a rework of how embeds stylings work in the platform.
Been using this solution for my website, and found the same thing. Very happy with 99% of how it operates. Glad to know covering off that last 1% niggle is on the cards!
Update on the embeds from DEV. I've been able to transfrom some of the embeds to gatsby-remark-oembded embeds.
You can probably use the same logic in a non-Gatsby site, like say Eleventy as it's just node processing markdown.