And by that I mean,
An http server that serves word-like rich formatted text documents and includes a web-based rich formatting text editor to write and edit these documents.
With some searching I found these might be candidates
Ghost
WriteFreely / Write.as
Plume
And maybe the following editors in some kind of standalone mode
TipTap
Editor.js
Quill.js
CKEditor 5
Slate.js
It’s hard to tell if any of these are the thing I’m looking for or not.
… A … blog? Are you asking if it’s possible to selfhost a blog?
You can tell OP is a younger Gen Z by this post lol.
It sounds like a stupid question but if OP isn’t 30+ it’s perfectly understandable to not be aware of the former ubiquity of self hosted blogs.
I am aware of self hosted “blogs” but that’s not what I want.
A better way to explain what I want is
This, but opensource and self-hosted
with per-file access control
This was a pretty good demo of hugo, a static site generator: https://youtu.be/MX4yy1dTVYg
Ok, well I see it’s not what I’m hoping for And by not this, I mean this

There are probably thousands of different static website generators that can make a more beautiful website out of the box, for free.
I want something that is more akin to using microsoft word except it’s in the browser and not made by satan Something I can recomment to people and know they’re not going to come back to me and ask “what is a markdown code block”
SSG are really a pain in the ass to work with, especially if you want something other than the standard theme.
Maybe if you don’t know CSS?
I’ve heard lots of good things about Ghost. I’ve also hosted Grav for a while and it’s pretty solid. You can do Wordpress, but I’d stay away as it gets bad fast and there are better alternatives. If you needed even more scale, Mediawiki is selfhostable too.
I’m reading the grav page and I have no idea how this is.
Is this like this
Press a button rich text editor appears write stuff press save send linkThat’s what I’m aiming for. I had a look, and the blog platform are so much clunkier and frustrating to use. And each of these seems to want to eat several of my weekends to install so I don’t have the luxury of reviewing all of them.



