Adding Search To A Static Jekyll Site Using Pagefind

Eureka! Found this very interesting and welcome post… # Adding search to a static Jekyll site using pagefind. Time to shore up my “1926” project so I can give it a try there.

Genealogy With NPM And Pagefind

It’s long overdue but this evening I managed to re-spin my the-Helge-Project genealogy website by adding NPM and Pagefind. Update: The result IS now available at https://tree.mcfate.family or the old site at https://helge.mcfate.family.

It should behave just like before with one BIG exception… the SEARCH bar near the top of the page.

Last night I was doing some arm-chair research for my grandmother’s 1926 travel journal and started wondering who the family would find when moving to Long Beach, CA. I quickly lamented that my https://helge.mcfate.family site had no “search” feature of any kind… How was I going to find that Long Beach connection?

Well, now that’s a piece of cake. Try it for yourself…

https://tree.mcfate.family

Stopped For Lunch At The Flc Event

Mackenzie’s appointment was quick and all good news so we managed to get away for lunch.

Helping Clear Snow At The Farm

My mother-in-law needed a little assistance, getting her electric snowblower going. Mission accomplished, now back to work.

Created A CollectionBuilder 1926 McFate Travel Journal Repo

This evening I created the 1926 McFate Travel Journal repo from the grinnell-college-CB-base template repo. Now I need a script that will break the primary .md document into smaller chunks, and update them in Azure Blob storage.

Going For a Walk Around Cherry Lake

This is really just another test of my system as we’re waiting on friends to go walking around the lake that isn’t anymore.

On a visit to the farm

Creating this new post from my phone this morning while I visit the farm.

Now Are We Done?

This test should return an accurate timestamp PLUS a valid “location” and “coordinates” from Drafts.

Thinking ahead, the “Publish Micropost to My Blog” script needs a couple more things: