Neo-HPSTR Jekyll is a responsive and modern blog template.
Demo: http://aronbordin.com/neo-hpstr-jekyll-theme
- Fork the repo
- Clone down the repo with
$ git clone git@github.com:username/reponame.git
- Delete the
demo/
folder andscreenshot.png
files - Install bundler with
$ gem install bundler
- Install gems with
$ bundle install
- Run Jekyll with
$ bundle exec jekyll serve --watch
- Begin hacking for your project
(If you are serving your blog at github, make sure to enale the gh-pages at yout repo settings)
If you already have a jekyll project, jump to the instructions bellow. Otherwise, follow these steps:
- Install jekyll and bundler with
$ gem install jekyll bundler
. - Create your website
jekyll new my-awesome-blog
. cd my-awesome-blog
Inside the project folder, install the theme as follows:
- Download the starter
/demo
content, quick download link and extract the content to the blog folter. - Install bundler with
$ gem install bundler
- Install gems with
$ bundle install
- Run Jekyll with
$ bundle exec jekyll serve --watch
- Begin hacking for your project
The boilerplate kit is better for more drastic hacking and changes, a project that's quite different to any other and needs a lot of custom work done. Additionally you'll only be able to use this method if you want to host it on GitHub Pages, as themes can't be submitted... yet.
Using the theme will allow you to receive updates made and will be more programmatic. To make your own changes you'll need to overwrite the files with your own.
- Modern design.
- Responsive templates for post, page, and home
_layouts
. Looks great on mobile, tablet, and desktop devices. - Gracefully degrades in older browsers. Compatible with Internet Explorer 8+ and all modern browsers.
- Sweet topbar animated menu with support for drop-downs.
- Optional Disqus comments and social sharing links.
- Open Graph and Twitter Cards support for a better social sharing experience.
- Simple custom 404 page to get you started.
- Syntax highlighting to make your code examples look snazzy
- Author panel, with social links
Here are some tips on how to customize your blog theme. If you have questions, just open a new issue :)
├── about.md # about page, /about/
├── assets/ # css, js, fonts, etc
├── categories.html
├── _config.yml # your blog configuration
├── demo/ # folder with quick start content
├── feed.xml # rss feed generator
├── Gemfile # project dependencies
├── Gruntfile.js # some grunt tasks, useful for theme developing
├── images/ # blog images
├── _includes
│ ├── author.html # author banner (at the end of post)
│ ├── browser-upgrade.html # ask for update
│ ├── disqus_comments.html # comments
│ ├── feed-footer.html # feed footers
│ ├── footer.html # page footer
│ ├── gallery # used for displaying images in a page
│ ├── header.html # header menu
│ ├── head.html # site head, with css includes and metadata
│ ├── icons.html # site icons
│ ├── pagination.html # pagination
│ ├── read-more.html # read-more banner, to recommend posts
│ ├── scripts.html # js scripts
│ └── social-share.html # floating social share integration
├── index.html # homepage
├── _layouts # blog layouts
│ ├── dark-post.html
│ ├── home.html
│ ├── page.html
│ └── post.html
├── LICENSE.txt
├── neo-hpstr-jekyll-theme.gemspec
├── package.json
├── _posts # sample posts
│ ├── 2016-11-26-sample-post-images.md
│ ├── 2016-11-27-video-post.md
│ ├── 2016-11-28-sample-link-post.md
│ ├── 2016-11-29-background-image.md
│ ├── 2016-11-30-dark-post.md
│ ├── 2016-12-01-code-highlighting-post.md
│ └── 2016-12-02-sample-post.md
├── posts.html # page for listing posts
├── README.md
├── _sass # blog style
├── screenshoot.png
├── search.html # search page
├── search.json
├── _site/
├── tags.html # tags page
Create a Disqus account and change disqus_shortname
in _config.yml
to the Disqus shortname you just setup. By default comments appear on all post and pages if you assigned a shortname. To disable commenting on a post or page, add the following to its YAML Front Matter:
comments: false
To disable Facebook, Twitter, and Google+ share links on a post or page, add the following to its front matter:
share: false
To enable floating share links on the left of the screen, edit it on _config.yml
:
float_share: true
Change your name, and avatar photo (200x200 pixels or larger), email, and social networking URLs. If you want to link to an external image on Gravatar or something similar you'll need to edit the path in _includes/author.html
since it assumes it is hosted on your site.
Your Google Analytics ID goes here along with meta tags for Google Webmaster Tools and Bing Webmaster Tools site verification.
To add additional links in the menu edit _config.yml
. Use the following format to set the URL and title for as many links as you'd like. External links will open in a new window.. You can create a sub-category using the submenu
item. Also, you can list your post categories setting the type: 'categories'
menu:
- title: 'Home'
url: '/'
- title: 'Fork'
url: 'http://github.com/aron-bordin/neo-hpstr-jekyll-theme'
- title: 'Tags'
url: '/tags'
- title: 'Categories'
url: '/categories'
type: 'categories'
- title: 'Favorites'
url: '#'
submenu:
- title: 'highlighter'
url: '/code-highlighting-post/'
- title: 'intro'
url: '/sample-post/'
While completely optional, I've included Octopress and some starter templates to automate the creation of new posts and pages. To take advantage of it start by installing the Octopress gem if it isn't already.
$ gem install octopress
Default command
$ octopress new post "Post Title"
Default works great if you want all your posts in one directory, but if you're like me and want to group them into subfolders like /posts
, /portfolio
, etc. Then this is the command for you. By specifying the DIR it will create a new post in that folder and populate the categories:
YAML with the same value.
$ octopress new post "New Portfolio Post Title" --dir portfolio
To create a new page use the following command.
$ octopress new page new-page/
Here you'll find some useful scss variables to help you to customize your Blog interface. All variables can be found at _sass/_variables.scss
.
To change its size, edit the $menu-height
value. It's recommended a value between 50px and 100px. This variable will automatically update the icon and menu size for you.
The navbar uses two colors, the top color and overflow color. The top color represents the navbar color when the window is not scrolled and the overflow color represents the color when we have a sufficient scroll to change its color.
You can change these colors using the $menu-top
and $menu-overflow
variable values.
The color that you see in the item under the mouse can be changed in the $header-margin
variable.
Jekyll 2.x added support for Sass files making it much easier to modify a theme's fonts and colors. By editing values found in _sass/variables.scss
you can fine tune the site's colors and typography.
For example if you wanted a red background instead of white you'd change $bodycolor: #fff;
to $bodycolor: $cc0033;
.
To modify the site's JavaScript files I setup a Grunt build script to lint/concatenate/minify all scripts into scripts.min.js
. Install Node.js, then install Grunt, and then finally install the dependencies for the theme contained in package.json
:
npm install
From the theme's root, use grunt
to concatenate JavaScript files and optimize .jpg
, .png
and .svg
files in the images/
folder.
You can also use grunt dev
in combination with bundle exec jekyll serve
to watch for updates in JS files that Grunt will then automatically re-build as you write your code, which will in turn auto-generate your Jekyll site when developing locally.
Having a problem getting something to work or want to know why I setup something in a certain way? File a GitHub Issue. And if you make something cool with this theme feel free to let me know.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/aron-bordin/neo-hpstr-jekyll-theme. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct.
To set up your environment to develop this theme, run bundle install
.
Your theme is setup just like a normal Jekyll site! To test your theme, run bundle exec jekyll serve
and open your browser at http://localhost:4000
. This starts a Jekyll server using your theme. Add pages, documents, data, etc. like normal to test your theme's contents. As you make modifications to your theme and to your content, your site will regenerate and you should see the changes in the browser after a refresh, just like normal.
When your theme is released, only the files in _layouts
, _includes
, and _sass
tracked with Git will be released.
The theme is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.