>> I parsed the question as being about whether the resulting >> rss.xml would be compatible with the input data, rather >> than with the rest of the output data generated by the >> static generator. >> >> That is: if you write a set of HTML files completely by >> hand (using no generators at all), then run a generator >> over them to produce a rss.xml file, can you drop that file >> into place in your Website structure and have things >> Just Work? > > Yes, I think so! > > There are also other options which have not been mentioned, > for example, one is, there is for example html2markdown and > several html2text, maybe one can then do markdown2rss > or text2rss?
https://github.com/chambln/pandoc-rss He writes: For example I could render two blog articles foo.md and bar.md along with the corresponding rss.xml feed using something like the following: $ pandoc --template=page -o foo.html foo.md $ pandoc --template=page -o bar.html bar.md $ pandoc-rss foo.md bar.md > rss.xml \ -t cosine.blue \ -d 'Blog by Gregory Chamberlain' \ -l https://cosine.blue \ -c 'GPLv3+ or CC BY-SA 4.0' \ -w 'g...@cosine.blue (Gregory Chamberlain)' \ -n en-GB -- underground experts united https://dataswamp.org/~incal