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Documentation Introduction Migrating

Bridgetown Features Post-Jekyll

Here’s a rundown of some 40 features Bridgetown has implemented since the fork from Jekyll in early 2020:

  • All-new “resource” content engine built from the ground up to facilitate demanding content needs.
  • Pages, posts, and custom collection items all share a common interface and behave in a predicable manner.
  • Fully custom taxonomies and defined relations (belongs to, has many, etc.) between resources.
  • Content model objects with load/save abilities which underlie resources.
  • The resource extension API.
  • Ruby front matter in addition to YAML.
  • Inspectors for Nokogiri-based modification of HTML & XML resources.
  • Configurable auto-sorted collections.
  • Robust I18n support for multilingual deployments.
  • An object-oriented componentized view layer.
  • Support for ERB & other Ruby template engines.
  • Ruby-based automation scripts & Rake tasks.
  • A console command for interacting and testing with your site via IRB.
  • Customizable console methods.
  • Fast, integrated frontend building via esbuild.
  • PostCSS support by default (Dart Sass support also available).
  • A Rack & Puma-based web server to supersede WEBrick.
  • A next-gen plugin API via Builders.
  • Plugin source manifests & frontend integration with Yarn auto-install.
  • A clearer, modern file & folder structure.
  • A powerful external API DSL for generating new content.
  • Support for pagination and prototype (aka archive) pages available out of the box.
  • YAML file-based front matter defaults with folder cascades.
  • Rapid installation of Hotwire (Turbo, Stimulus).
  • Bundled configurations for popular libraries & tools such as Lit, Shoelace, and Open Props.
  • Easy website testing setup w/Minitest or Cypress.
  • Auto-reloadable local plugins via Zeitwerk.
  • Thor-based CLI tools with straightfoward extensibility.
  • <mark> highlighter support in Markdown content via :: or ==.
  • SSR via an integration with Roda, a blazing-fast Ruby web toolkit.
  • File-based dynamic routes.
  • Environment-specific metadata.
  • Streamlined installation processes on modern Unix-style OSes with modern Ruby versions.
  • YARD API documentation (still a work in progress but getting there!).
  • ViewComponent compatibility shim.
  • Modern Liquid (v5+) support.
  • SSG/SSR & client-side hydration of Lit-based web components.
  • Many Ruby enhancements included via ActiveSupport.
  • A large number of “breaking” fixes Jekyll had left unaddressed.
  • Active first-party support via community Discord & GitHub Discussions + commercial support.

Ready to migrate to Bridgetown? Here’s an overview guide of the steps you’ll want to take.

Back to Migrating