pages/logseq-export/README.md

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# logseq-export
Tool to export raw [Logseq](https://github.com/logseq/logseq) Markdown pages (with `public::` page property) into Markdown blog posts with front matter.
- Takes Logseq page properties (`title:: Hello world`) and turns them into [Front Matter properties](https://gohugo.io/content-management/front-matter/) `title: Hello World`.
- Changes the Markdown syntax to remove the top-level bullet points.
- if you have top-level block `- private` in your file, `logseq-export` will remove it and all content that follows. I use it for copyrighted content like verbatim highlights/pictures from books.
See an **example of a deployed graph** on [viktomas.github.io/logseq-export](https://viktomas.github.io/logseq-export/). The graph and the [Hugo](https://gohugo.io/) project can be found in the [example](/example/) folder. Run the example locally with ``
**Note: I completely reworked `logseq-export` to be a bit more versatile and universal. See the [version `v0.0.3`](https://github.com/viktomas/logseq-export/tree/v0.0.3) if you are not ready to move on.**
## Install
- Download the latest binary for your OS in the [Releases](https://github.com/viktomas/logseq-export/releases) page
- `go install github.com/viktomas/logseq-export@latest` if you have Go installed
## Usage
The `logseq-export` utility will export the pages into an export folder that can then be imported into your static site generator.
```mermaid
graph LR;
LS[Logseq graph] --"logseq-export"--> EF[export folder]
EF --"import_to_hugo.sh"--> HU[Hugo static site generator]
```
### Export
```
logseq-export
-outputFolder string
[MANDATORY] Folder where all public pages are exported.
-logseqFolder string
[MANDATORY] Path to the root of your logseq graph containing /pages and /journals directories.
```
*Optional* configuration is in a file called `export.yaml` in your logseq folder.
```yml
# list of logseq page properties that won't be quoted in the markdown front matter
unquotedProperties:
- date
```
#### Command example
This is how I run the command on my machine:
```sh
logseq-export \
--logseqFolder /Users/tomas/workspace/private/notes \
--outputFolder /tmp/logseq-export \
```
This will take my logseq notes and copies them to the export folder, it will also copy all the images to `/tmp/logseq-export/logseq-assets`, but the image links themselves are going to have `/logseq-asstes/` prefix (`![alt](/logseq/assets/image.png)`).
#### Constraints
- `logseq-export` assumes that all the pages you want to export are in `pages/` folder inside your `logseqFolder`.
### Import
```sh
# these environment variables are optional
# the values in this example are default values
export BLOG_CONTENT_FODLER="/graph"
export BLOG_IMAGES_FOLDER="/assets/graph"
# copies pages from `/tmp/logseq/export/logseq-pages` to `~/workspace/private/blog/content/graph`
# copies assets from `/tmp/logseq/export/logseq-assets` to `~/workspace/private/blog/static/assets/graph`
# replaces all `/logseq-assets` in all image URLs with `/assets/graph`
./import_to_hugo.sh \
/tmp/logseq-export
~/workspace/private/blog
```
### Logseq page properties with a special meaning (all optional)
- `public` - as soon as this page property is present (regardless of value), the page gets exported
- `title` - either the `title::` is present and used as `title:` front matter attribute, or the page file name is unescaped (e.g. `%3A` changes to `:`) and used as the `title:`
- `tags` - Logseq uses comma separated values (`tags:: tag1, tag2`) but valid `yaml` in the front matter has to surround the value with square brackets (`tags: [tag1, tag2]`). The `tags` attribute is **always unquoted**.
- `slug` used as a file name
- `date` it's used as a file name prefix
- if your logseq `date::` attributes contains the link brackets e.g. `[[2023-07-30]]`, `logseq-export` will remove them
## From
![logseq test page](./docs/assets/logseq-teset-page-2.png)
## To
`content/graph/2022-09-25-test-page.md` :
~~~md
---
date: "2022-09-25"
public: true
slug: "test-page"
title: "Test page"
---
This is an example paragraph
- Second level means bullet points
- `logseq-export` also supports multi-level bullet points
```ts
const v = "Hello world"
```
You can
also
have
Multi-line strings
~~~
## Local development
- Have golang installed
- Use unix or WSL2 on Windows
- `make build` - builds the binary
- `make test` - tests the project
- `make watch-test` - (only on macOS) - run test on every file change
- `make example` - export the example Logseq graph into the example Hugo site
- `make watch-example` (only on macOS) - run `make example` on any file change