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Varun Dey
Varun Dey

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Migrating from Jekyll to Gatsby

After much hype, I recently migrated my website from Gatsby to Jekyll. This blog post is about why did I choose to migrate to Gatsby and what were the learnings along the way.

Year 2015

This was a time when I was an undergrad student in college. I was a back-end developer working with Python and had little or close to no knowledge of how front-end web works. This was a time when the only JavaScript I knew was through jQuery and that too had a hard time dealing with. I could somehow make JavaScript work by copying snippets from StackOverflow but did not (want to) understand why JavaScript is behaving the way it is behaving. Needless to say I did not like working with JavaScript and tried to avoid as much as I could. I loved Python and wanted to use it everywhere.

Year 2016

By this time, I started realising my naiveness and understood that Python can not be a solution for everything. There are certain problems that JavaScript solves well. During this time, I also needed a website as my portfolio to showcase my projects and interests for the oncoming placement season. I took this as an opportunity to learn JavaScript but soon realised that the scope of the entire project was just too big for me. I neither had an idea what my website should look nor had the expertise to build it. After much head banging, I found Jekyll - a simple ruby based static site generator. I started experimenting with it and found using it was super fun for me because I was already fluent with command line in my linux machine and I could associate Ruby gems and bundles with Python modules and pip. Also there were thousands of Jekyll based templates readily available. I liked Material theme by Lukas Himsel the best. I quickly forked the repo and built my own version of it. In this process, I also added few features to the original repo as part of Hacktoberfest 2016. My website was built and github-pages made it super easy to deploy because of it supporting Jekyll themes out of the box. Everything was good. I could easily add blog posts to my website and the build was reliable.

Year 2017

It was difficult writing blogs after joining my first company as an intern. I was 100% dedicated solving problems for our users and solving their pain points. The company rewarded me well and I got a full time opportunity to work there. Time to update my website. Remember the reliable build system? Yeah that was thrown out of the window. I could not even build my own Github repo on my new machine. Digging into the errors, it seemed the package version had changed over the course of a year and Ruby's magical syntax was also not proving to be helpful. I cleansed Ruby out of my machine and reinstalled it again. The whole process made me tear my hair out but I somehow made it work hoping it should work here after now. Since I also wanted to learn JavaScript, I made a few front end side projects.

Year 2018

I had started understanding the concepts of JavaScript and why it behaves the way it behaves. I also learnt React and was totally blown away by it. I wanted to use it for my website. But I had the same problem all over again. I did not have the UX expertise. But this time I knew where to look. Gatsby was the one framework I found which would suit my purpose. I tried experimenting with it but found it to be too cumbersome. I had to make the change cascade at different places to make something work and visible at all places. I did not experiment much with Gatsby hereafter. Meanwhile Jekyll was making me crazy with a new error message every time I wanted to update something. I just avoided updating my blog altogether.

Year 2019

Things were this bad that I had to experiment in production for my website for a change to be reflected. I also tweeted about it. This was a breaking point for me. I wanted to move to a build system which is more reliable. I opened Gatsby again and started looking for a theme which would fit my needs and I found a nice looking theme by Preston Richey. I spent few hours understanding the flow and updating the source code according to me. This time Netlify helped me with deploying my new website to my domain.

I now have my website built on React and the data being served as GraphQL queries but I still can't find a way to show my other repositories as pages to my domain. Hoping this won't be a breaking point again this time. ✌️

Top comments (3)

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jeky_zero profile image
Jeky

Hey Varun,

I’ve just started using Jekyll, it’s interesting you left it behind. Do you think you’d be still using Jekyll now if it wouldn’t have been tricky to set back up again with the right version? Or do you think it is limited and you would have eventually moved on any way for some reason or other?

Cheers,

Dan.

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varundey profile image
Varun Dey

Hey Dan, thanks for your comment. I think I would not mind continue using Jekyll if it was not so painful to do minor updates every time. Also part of the reason I left Jekyll is because I do not understand Ruby as much as I understand JavaScript. I wanted to leverage modern JavaScript stack in my website. That being said, I miss Jekyll for few of the use cases - I still have not figured out a way to set up relative pages under my domain using Gatsby. This was super easy in Jekyll. Hope this helps.

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Jeky

👍 thanks