These simple scripts **enrich your Jamstack-site** by adding/manipulating/whatever (meta)data, such as extra posts, indexing, and so forth. A primary example of these tools in action is my own site https://brainbaking.com - inspect how it's used at https://github.com/wgroeneveld/brainbaking
An async function that parses your Fediverse-compatible feed (Mastodon/Pleroma/...) and converts entries to `.md` Markdown files for your Jamstack to enjoy.
Note that this **does not** delete the notes dir with every call. It simply checks if there isn't already a file with the same name (based on the publication date), and adds one if not.
<title>I pulled the Google plug and installed LineageOS: https://brainbaking.com/post/2021/03/getting-ri...</title>
<contenttype="html">I pulled the Google plug and installed LineageOS: <a href="https://brainbaking.com/post/2021/03/getting-rid-of-tracking-using-lineageos/" rel="ugc">https://brainbaking.com/post/2021/03/getting-rid-of-tracking-using-lineageos/</a> Very impressed so far! Also rely on my own CalDAV server to replace GCalendar. Any others here running <a class="hashtag" data-tag="lineageos" href="https://chat.brainbaking.com/tag/lineageos" rel="tag ugc">#lineageos</a> for privacy reasons?</content>
This generates the file `01h20m03s35.md` (it assumes UTC times in the feed and adjusts according to specified `utcOffset`, such as GMT+1 in this example), with contents:
title: "I pulled the Google plug and installed LineageOS: https://brainbaking.com/post/2021/03/getting-ri..."
date: "2021-03-01T19:03:35"
---
I pulled the Google plug and installed LineageOS: <ahref="https://brainbaking.com/post/2021/03/getting-rid-of-tracking-using-lineageos/"rel="ugc">https://brainbaking.com/post/2021/03/getting-rid-of-tracking-using-lineageos/</a> Very impressed so far! Also rely on my own CalDAV server to replace GCalendar. Any others here running <aclass="hashtag"data-tag="lineageos"href="https://chat.brainbaking.com/tag/lineageos"rel="tag ugc">#lineageos</a> for privacy reasons?
An async function that reads and modifies Goodreads JS widget embed code, converting low-res book covers to hi-res ones if possible. This omits possible Goodread cookies and cross-domain mishaps.
An async function that reads all `.md` files of certain locations (pass as an array `[]`), generating a [Lunr.js](https://lunrjs.com/) `.json` index object. Serialize it yourself wherever you'd like it to go.
Adds https://howlongtobeat.com/ game length (`MainGame`) and an ID to your front matter, provided you first added a property called `game_name`. (This gets substituted).
Usage example:
```js
await howlong(`${__dirname}/content/articles`)
```
It will print out games and metadata it found. Uses the cool [howlongtobeat npm package](https://www.npmjs.com/package/howlongtobeat) to do its dirty work.
Working example: https://jefklakscodex.com/articles/reviews/diablo-3/ (on the left side). Check out the Hugo template to use the properties at https://github.com/wgroeneveld/jefklakscodex .