Jekyll theme ============ [![CI](https://github.com/egor-tensin/jekyll-theme/actions/workflows/ci.yml/badge.svg)](https://github.com/egor-tensin/jekyll-theme/actions/workflows/ci.yml) My [Jekyll] theme. I use it for [egor-tensin.github.io], [blog], [sorting-algorithms], [wireguard-config]. [Jekyll]: https://jekyllrb.com/ [egor-tensin.github.io]: https://egor-tensin.github.io/ [blog]: https://egor-tensin.github.io/blog/ [sorting-algorithms]: https://egor-tensin.github.io/sorting-algorithms/ [wireguard-config]: https://egor-tensin.github.io/wireguard-config/ Preview ------- An example website can be viewed at https://egor-tensin.github.io/jekyll-theme/. Usage ----- Use the `jekyll-remote-theme` plugin. Put this in your \_config.yml: ``` plugins: - jekyll-remote-theme # Other plugins... remote_theme: egor-tensin/jekyll-theme # Preferably, pin the exact commit: #remote_theme: egor-tensin/jekyll-theme@COMMIT_HASH ``` Configuration ------------- The complete list of configuration options follows. Put it in \_config.yml and adjust how you see fit. ``` settings: project: name: Test project # The following settings are picked up from GitHub by default. description: This is a test project license: MIT License license_file: LICENSE.txt author: name: John Doe email: John.Doe@example.com navbar: hide: false # Only relevant if the project's on GitHub. github: link: GitHub icon: globe sidebar: hide: false # If you want to enable Google Analytics, optional: ga_tag: X-XXXXXXXXXX ``` Features -------- * [Layouts](#layouts) * [Navbar](#navbar) * [Sidebar](#sidebar) * [Feed](#feed) * [Categories](#categories) * [Code snippets](#code-snippets) * [Shell commands](#shell-commands) * [Typesetting math](#typesetting-math) * [Custom CSS & JavaScript](#custom-css--javascript) ### Layouts * `plain`: navbar at the top + footer at the bottom. * `default`: same as plain, but with a sidebar on the right. * `page`: same as default, but with the page's header. * `post`: same as default, but with the post's header and publication date. ### Navbar Hide the navbar by setting either `site.settings.navbar.hide` or `page.navbar.hide` to `true`. Put a page on the navbar by setting `page.navbar.link` to `true` or a custom HTML string. Pages are sorted in the ascending order of `page.navbar.priority`. If a page on the navbar is paginated, set `page.navbar.paginated` to `true` so that it doesn't appear more than once. You can add a glyphicon to the navbar link by settings `page.navbar.icon` to something like "home" or "envelope" (or [any other glyphicon]). [any other glyphicon]: https://getbootstrap.com/docs/3.4/components/#glyphicons #### GitHub link If you use `jekyll-github-metadata` (you do if you use the `github-pages` gem), a link to the GitHub repository is added at the end of the navbar. Customize the link text and the icon by setting `site.settings.navbar.github.link` and `site.settings.navbar.github.icon` accordingly. Hide the link by setting `site.settings.navbar.github` to `false`. ### Sidebar Hide the sidebar by setting either `site.settings.sidebar.hide` or `page.sidebar.hide` to `true`. The sidebar includes two entries by default: "About" and "Latest posts". Hide them individually by setting `sidebar.{about,latest_posts}.hide` to `true` (either under `site.settings` or `page`). ### Feed See [feed/index.html] for an example of how to easily create a paginated post feed. Basically, just include posts/feed.html. [feed/index.html]: feed/index.html ### Categories See [life/index.html] or [work/index.html] for examples of how to create category pages, with a list of posts belonging to the category. Basically, just include categories/category.html and set the `category` parameter to the category's name. [life/index.html]: life/index.html [work/index.html]: work/index.html If you want to create a page with a list of all categories and the posts belonging to them, see [archive/index.html] for an example. Simply including categories/all.html should do the job. [archive/index.html]: archive/index.html ### Code snippets See [this post][snippets] for an example of how to conveniently embed code snippets in your pages. Basically, you need to put something like this in the front matter: [snippets]: _posts/2021-04-09-snippets.md ``` snippets_root_directory: snippets snippets_language: c++ snippets: hello: - hello.hpp - hello.cpp world: - world.hpp - world.cpp ``` And then you can just format an entire section of snippets using a single `include`: ``` {% include jekyll-theme/snippets/section.html section_id='hello' %} ``` The line above would output both hello.hpp and hello.cpp to the page. Code snippets can be hidden in collapsible panels. See [this post][collapsible] for an example. [collapsible]: _posts/2021-04-10-collapsible.md ### Shell commands See [this post][shell] for an example of adding pretty shell commands and their outputs to a page. The gist is: [shell]: _posts/2022-03-21-shell.md ``` {% include jekyll-theme/shell.html cmd='echo 123' out='123' %} ``` ### Typesetting math [MathJax] can be used to typeset mathematics using LaTeX. To use MathJax, set `mathjax` to `true` in page's front matter. Then you can do things like this: ``` This is an inline formula: $$y = kx + b$$. This is a formula in a separate block: $$ y = kx + b $$ ``` [MathJax]: https://www.mathjax.org/ Behind the scenes, Kramdown transforms these to `\(...\)` and `\[...\]` sequences, to be processed by MathJax. See [this post][mathjax post] for a usage example. [mathjax post]: _posts/2021-04-08-mathjax.md ### Custom CSS & JavaScript Add custom `` tags to the header by adding them either to: * `site.settings.links` in _config.yml (the new links will be added to all pages), settings: links: - {rel: stylesheet, href: 'https://example.com/global-link.css'} - {rel: stylesheet, href: 'assets/css/local-link.css'} * `page.links` in a page's front matter (will be added to this page only). --- links: - {rel: stylesheet, href: 'https://example.com/global-link.css'} - {rel: stylesheet, href: 'assets/css/local-link.css'} --- You can also add custom `