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diff --git a/docs/creating-a-theme.rst b/docs/creating-a-theme.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a1b737d --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/creating-a-theme.rst @@ -0,0 +1,851 @@ +.. title: Creating a Theme +.. slug: creating-a-theme +.. date: 2015-05-28 18:46:48 UTC +.. tags: +.. category: +.. link: +.. description: +.. type: text + +Nikola is a static site and blog generator. So is Jekyll. While I like what we have done with Nikola, +I do admit that Jekyll (and others!) have many more, and nicer themes than Nikola does. + +This document is an attempt at making it easier for 3rd parties (that means *you* people! ;-) to +create themes. Since I **suck** at designing websites, I asked for opinions on themes to port, +and got some feedback. Since this is **Not So Hard™**, I will try to make time to port a few +and see what happens. + +If you are looking for a reference, check out :doc:`Theming reference <theming>` and `Template variables <https://getnikola.com/template-variables.html>`_. + +Today’s theme is `Lanyon <https://github.com/poole/lanyon>`__ which is written by `@mdo <https://twitter.com/mdo>`__ +and released under a MIT license, which is liberal enough. + +So, let’s get started. + +Checking It Out +--------------- + +The first step in porting a theme is making the original theme work. Lanyon is awesome in that its +`GitHub project <https://github.com/poole/lanyon>`__ is a full site! + +So:: + + # Get jekyll + sudo apt-get install jekyll + + # Get Lanyon + git clone git@github.com:poole/lanyon.git + + # Build it + cd lanyon && jekyll build + + # Look at it + jekyll serve & google-chrome http://localhost:4000 + +If you **do not want to install Jekyll**, you can also see it in action at http://lanyon.getpoole.com/ + +Some things jump to my mind: + +1. This is one fine looking theme +2. Very clear and readable +3. Nice hidden navigation-thingy + +Also, from looking at `the project’s README <https://github.com/poole/lanyon/blob/master/README.md>`__ +it supports some nice configuration options: + +1. Color schemes +2. Reverse layout +3. Sidebar overlay instead of push +4. Open the sidebar by default, or on a per-page basis by using its metadata + +Let’s try to make all those nice things survive the porting. + +Starting From Somewhere +----------------------- + +Nikola has a nice, clean, base theme from which you can start when writing your own theme. +Why start from that instead of from a clean slate? Because theme inheritance is going to save you a ton of work, +that’s why. If you start from scratch you won’t be able to build **anything** until you have a bunch of +templates written. Starting from base, you just need to hack on the things you **need** to change. + +First, we create a site with some content in it. We’ll use the ``nikola init`` wizard (with the ``--demo`` option) for that:: + + $ nikola init --demo lanyon-port + Creating Nikola Site + ==================== + + This is Nikola v7.8.0. We will now ask you a few easy questions about your new site. + If you do not want to answer and want to go with the defaults instead, simply restart with the `-q` parameter. + --- Questions about the site --- + Site title [My Nikola Site]: + Site author [Nikola Tesla]: + Site author's e-mail [n.tesla@example.com]: + Site description [This is a demo site for Nikola.]: + Site URL [https://example.com/]: + --- Questions about languages and locales --- + We will now ask you to provide the list of languages you want to use. + Please list all the desired languages, comma-separated, using ISO 639-1 codes. The first language will be used as the default. + Type '?' (a question mark, sans quotes) to list available languages. + Language(s) to use [en]: + + Please choose the correct time zone for your blog. Nikola uses the tz database. + You can find your time zone here: + http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones + + Time zone [UTC]: + Current time in UTC: 16:02:07 + Use this time zone? [Y/n] + --- Questions about comments --- + You can configure comments now. Type '?' (a question mark, sans quotes) to list available comment systems. If you do not want any comments, just leave the field blank. + Comment system: + + That's it, Nikola is now configured. Make sure to edit conf.py to your liking. + If you are looking for themes and addons, check out https://themes.getnikola.com/ and https://plugins.getnikola.com/. + Have fun! + [2015-05-28T16:02:08Z] INFO: init: A new site with example data has been created at lanyon-port. + [2015-05-28T16:02:08Z] INFO: init: See README.txt in that folder for more information. + + +Then, we create an empty theme inheriting from base. This theme will use Mako templates. If you prefer Jinja2, +then you should use ``base-jinja`` as a parent and ``jinja`` as engine instead:: + + $ cd lanyon-port/ + $ nikola theme -n lanyon --parent base --engine mako + +Edit ``conf.py`` and set ``THEME = 'lanyon'``. Also set ``USE_BUNDLES = False`` (just do it for now, we’ll get to bundles later). +Also, if you intend to publish your theme on the Index, or want to use it with older versions (v7.8.5 or older), use the ``--legacy-meta`` option for ``nikola theme -n``. + +You can now build that site using ``nikola build`` and it will look like this: + +.. figure:: https://getnikola.com/images/lanyon-0.thumbnail.png + :target: https://getnikola.com/images/lanyon-0.png + + This is just the base theme. + +Basic CSS +--------- + +The next step is to know exactly how Lanyon’s pages work. To do this, we read its HTML. +First let’s look at the head element: + +.. code:: html + + <!DOCTYPE html> + <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en-us"> + + <head> + <link href="http://gmpg.org/xfn/11" rel="profile"> + <meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"> + + <!-- Enable responsiveness on mobile devices--> + <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0, maximum-scale=1"> + + <title> + Lanyon · A Jekyll theme + </title> + + <!-- CSS --> + <link rel="stylesheet" href="/public/css/poole.css"> + <link rel="stylesheet" href="/public/css/syntax.css"> + <link rel="stylesheet" href="/public/css/lanyon.css"> + <link rel="stylesheet" href="http://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=PT+Serif:400,400italic,700|PT+Sans:400"> + + <!-- Icons --> + <link rel="apple-touch-icon-precomposed" sizes="144x144" href="/public/apple-touch-icon-144-precomposed.thumbnail.png"> + <link rel="shortcut icon" href="/public/favicon.ico"> + + <!-- RSS --> + <link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="RSS" href="/atom.xml"> + + <!-- Google Analytics --> + [...] + </head> + +The interesting part there is that it loads a few CSS files. If you check the source of your Nikola site, you will +see something fairly similar: + +.. code:: html + + <!DOCTYPE html> + <html prefix="og: http://ogp.me/ns# article: http://ogp.me/ns/article# " vocab="http://ogp.me/ns" lang="en"> + <head> + <meta charset="utf-8"> + <meta name="description" content="This is a demo site for Nikola."> + <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width"> + <title>My Nikola Site | My Nikola Site</title> + + <link href="assets/css/rst_base.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + <link href="assets/css/code.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + <link href="assets/css/theme.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + + <link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="RSS" href="rss.xml"> + <link rel="canonical" href="https://example.com/index.html"> + <!--[if lt IE 9]><script src="assets/js/html5.js"></script><![endif]--><link rel="prefetch" href="posts/welcome-to-nikola.html" type="text/html"> + </head> + + + +Luckily, since this is all under a very liberal license, we can just copy these CSS files into +Nikola, adapting the paths a little so that they follow our conventions:: + + $ mkdir -p themes/lanyon/assets/css + $ cp ../lanyon/public/css/poole.css themes/lanyon/assets/css/ + $ cp ../lanyon/public/css/lanyon.css themes/lanyon/assets/css/ + +Notice I am *not* copying ``syntax.css``? That’s because Nikola handles that styles for syntax highlighting +in a particular way, using a setting called ``CODE_COLOR_SCHEME`` where you can configure +what color scheme the syntax highlighter uses. You can use your own ``assets/css/code.css`` if you +don’t like the provided ones. + +Nikola **requires** ``assets/css/rst_base.css`` and ``assets/css/code.css`` to function properly. +We will also add themes for Jupyter (``assets/css/ipython.min.css`` +and ``assets/css/nikola_ipython.css``) into the template; note that they are +activated only if you configured your ``POSTS``/``PAGES`` with ipynb support. +There’s also ``assets/css/nikola_rst.css``, which adds Bootstrap 3-style reST notes etc. + +But how do I tell **our** lanyon theme to use those CSS files instead of whatever it’s using now? +By giving our theme its own base_helper.tmpl. + +That file is a **template** used to generate parts of the pages. It’s large and +complicated but we don’t need to change a lot of it. First, make a copy in your +theme (note this command requires setting your ``THEME`` in ``conf.py`` to +``lanyon``):: + + $ nikola theme -c base_helper.tmpl + +The part we want to change is this: + +.. code:: html+mako + + <%def name="html_stylesheets()"> + %if use_bundles: + %if use_cdn: + <link href="/assets/css/all.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + %else: + <link href="/assets/css/all-nocdn.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + %endif + %else: + <link href="/assets/css/rst_base.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + <link href="/assets/css/nikola_rst.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + <link href="/assets/css/code.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + <link href="/assets/css/theme.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + %if has_custom_css: + <link href="/assets/css/custom.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + %endif + %endif + % if needs_ipython_css: + <link href="/assets/css/ipython.min.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + <link href="/assets/css/nikola_ipython.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + % endif + </%def> + +And we will change it so it uses the lanyon styles instead of theme.css (again, ignore the bundles for now!): + +.. code:: html+mako + + <%def name="html_stylesheets()"> + %if use_bundles: + <link href="/assets/css/all.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + %else: + <link href="/assets/css/rst_base.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + <link href="/assets/css/nikola_rst.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + <link href="/assets/css/poole.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + <link href="/assets/css/lanyon.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + <link href="/assets/css/code.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + %if has_custom_css: + <link href="/assets/css/custom.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + %endif + %endif + % if needs_ipython_css: + <link href="/assets/css/ipython.min.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + <link href="/assets/css/nikola_ipython.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"> + % endif + <link rel="stylesheet" href="http://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=PT+Serif:400,400italic,700|PT+Sans:400"> + </%def> + +.. figure:: https://getnikola.com/images/lanyon-1.thumbnail.png + :target: https://getnikola.com/images/lanyon-1.png + + You may say this looks like crap. Don’t worry, we are just starting :-) + +Page Layout +----------- + +This is trickier but should be no problem for people with a basic understanding of HTML and a desire to make a theme! + +Lanyon’s content is split in two parts: a sidebar and the rest. The sidebar looks like this (shortened for comprehension): + +.. code:: html + + <body> + <!-- Target for toggling the sidebar `.sidebar-checkbox` is for regular + styles, `#sidebar-checkbox` for behavior. --> + <input type="checkbox" class="sidebar-checkbox" id="sidebar-checkbox"> + + <!-- Toggleable sidebar --> + <div class="sidebar" id="sidebar"> + <div class="sidebar-item"> + <p>A reserved <a href="http://jekyllrb.com" target="_blank">Jekyll</a> theme that places the utmost gravity on content with a hidden drawer. Made by <a href="https://twitter.com/mdo" target="_blank">@mdo</a>.</p> + </div> + + <nav class="sidebar-nav"> + <a class="sidebar-nav-item active" href="/">Home</a> + <a class="sidebar-nav-item" href="/about/">About</a> + [...] + </nav> + </div> + +So, a plain body, with an input element that controls the sidebar, a div which is the sidebar itself. +Inside that, div.sidebar-item for items, and a nav with "navigational links". This is followed by the "masthead" and +the content itself, which we will look at in a bit. + +If we look for the equivalent code in Nikola’s side, we see this: + +.. code:: html + + <body> + <a href="#content" class="sr-only sr-only-focusable">Skip to main content</a> + <div id="container"> + <header id="header" role="banner"> + <h1 id="brand"><a href="https://example.com/" title="My Nikola Site" rel="home"> <span id="blog-title">My Nikola Site</span> </a></h1> + <nav id="menu" role="navigation"><ul> + <li><a href="../archive.html">Archive</a></li> + <li><a href="../categories/index.html">Tags</a></li> + <li><a href="../rss.xml">RSS feed</a></li> + +So Nikola has the "masthead" above the nav element, and uses list elements in nav instead of bare links. +Not all that different is it? + +Let’s make it lanyon-like! We will need 2 more templates: `base.tmpl <https://github.com/getnikola/nikola/blob/master/nikola/data/themes/base/templates/base.tmpl>`__ and `base_header.tmpl <https://github.com/getnikola/nikola/blob/master/nikola/data/themes/base/templates/base_header.tmpl>`__. Get them and put them in your ``themes/lanyon/templates`` folder. + +Let’s look at ``base.tmpl`` first. It’s short and nice, it looks like a webpage without +all the interesting stuff: + +.. code:: html+mako + + ## -*- coding: utf-8 -*- + <%namespace name="base" file="base_helper.tmpl" import="*"/> + <%namespace name="header" file="base_header.tmpl" import="*"/> + <%namespace name="footer" file="base_footer.tmpl" import="*"/> + ${set_locale(lang)} + ${base.html_headstart()} + <%block name="extra_head"> + ### Leave this block alone. + </%block> + ${template_hooks['extra_head']()} + </head> + <body> + <a href="#content" class="sr-only sr-only-focusable">${messages("Skip to main content")}</a> + <div id="container"> + ${header.html_header()} + <main id="content" role="main"> + <%block name="content"></%block> + </main> + ${footer.html_footer()} + </div> + ${body_end} + ${template_hooks['body_end']()} + ${base.late_load_js()} + </body> + </html> + +That link which says "Skip to main content" is very important for accessibility, so we will leave it in +place. But below, you can see how it creates the "container" div we see in the Nikola page, and the content is +created by ``html_header()`` which is defined in ``base_header.tmpl`` The actual ``nav`` element is done +by the ``html_navigation_links`` function out of the ``NAVIGATION_LINKS`` and ``NAVIGATION_ALT_LINKS`` options. (Let's put the alt links after regular ones; Bootstrap puts it on the right side, for example.) + +So, first, lets change that base template to be more lanyon-like: + +.. code:: html+mako + + ## -*- coding: utf-8 -*- + <%namespace name="base" file="base_helper.tmpl" import="*"/> + <%namespace name="header" file="base_header.tmpl" import="*"/> + <%namespace name="footer" file="base_footer.tmpl" import="*"/> + ${set_locale(lang)} + ${base.html_headstart()} + <%block name="extra_head"> + ### Leave this block alone. + </%block> + ${template_hooks['extra_head']()} + </head> + <body> + <a href="#content" class="sr-only sr-only-focusable">${messages("Skip to main content")}</a> + <!-- Target for toggling the sidebar `.sidebar-checkbox` is for regular + styles, `#sidebar-checkbox` for behavior. --> + <input type="checkbox" class="sidebar-checkbox" id="sidebar-checkbox"> + + <!-- Toggleable sidebar --> + <div class="sidebar" id="sidebar"> + <div class="sidebar-item"> + <p>A reserved <a href="http://getnikola.com" target="_blank">Nikola</a> theme that places the utmost gravity on content with a hidden drawer. Made by <a href="https://twitter.com/mdo" target="_blank">@mdo</a> for Jekyll, + ported to Nikola by <a href="https://twitter.com/ralsina" target="_blank">@ralsina</a>.</p> + </div> + ${header.html_navigation_links()} + </div> + + <main id="content" role="main"> + <%block name="content"></%block> + </main> + ${footer.html_footer()} + ${body_end} + ${template_hooks['body_end']()} + ${base.late_load_js()} + </body> + </html> + +.. figure:: https://getnikola.com/images/lanyon-2.thumbnail.png + :target: https://getnikola.com/images/lanyon-2.png + + And that’s after I exposed the sidebar by clicking on an invisible widget! + +One problem, which causes that yellow color in the sidebar is a CSS conflict. +We are loading ``rst_base.css`` which specifies +the background color of ``div.sidebar`` which is more specific than +``lanyon.css``, which specifies for ``.sidebar`` alone. + +There are many ways to fix this, I chose to change lanyon.css to also use div.sidebar: + +.. code:: css + + div.sidebar,.sidebar { + position: fixed; + top: 0; + bottom: 0; + left: -14rem; + width: 14rem; + [...] + +This is annoying but it will happen when you just grab CSS from different places. The "Inspect Element" +feature of your web browser is your best friend for these situations. + +Another problem is that the contents of the nav element are wrong. They are not bare links. We will fix that in +``base_header.html``, like this: + +.. code:: html+mako + + <%def name="html_navigation_links()"> + <nav id="menu" role="navigation" class="sidebar-nav"> + %for url, text in navigation_links[lang]: + <a class="sidebar-nav-item" href="${url}">${text}</a> + %endfor + ${template_hooks['menu']()} + + %for url, text in navigation_alt_links[lang]: + <a class="sidebar-nav-item" href="${url}">${text}</a> + %endfor + ${template_hooks['menu_alt']()} + </nav> + </%def> + +**Note: this means this theme will not support submenus in navigation. If you want that, I’ll happily take a patch.** + +.. figure:: https://getnikola.com/images/lanyon-3.thumbnail.png + :target: https://getnikola.com/images/lanyon-3.png + + Starting to see a resemblance? + +Now let’s look at the content. In Lanyon, this is how the "main" content looks: + +.. code:: html + + <!-- Wrap is the content to shift when toggling the sidebar. We wrap the + content to avoid any CSS collisions with our real content. --> + <div class="wrap"> + <div class="masthead"> + <div class="container"> + <h3 class="masthead-title"> + <a href="/" title="Home">Lanyon</a> + <small>A Jekyll theme</small> + </h3> + </div> + </div> + + <div class="container content"> + <div class="post"> + <h1 class="post-title">Introducing Lanyon</h1> + <span class="post-date">02 Jan 2014</span> + <p>Lanyon is an unassuming <a href="http://jekyllrb.com">Jekyll</a> theme [...] + </div> + </div> + </div> + <label for="sidebar-checkbox" class="sidebar-toggle"></label> + </body> + </html> + +Everything inside the "container content" div is… the content. The rest is a masthead with the site title +and at the bottom a label for the sidebar toggle. Easy to do in ``base.tmpl`` +(only showing the relevant part): + +.. code:: html+mako + + <!-- Wrap is the content to shift when toggling the sidebar. We wrap the + content to avoid any CSS collisions with our real content. --> + <div class="wrap"> + <div class="masthead"> + <div class="container"> + <h3 class="masthead-title"> + <a href="/" title="Home">Lanyon</a> + <small>A Jekyll theme</small> + </h3> + </div> + </div> + + <div class="container content" id="content"> + <%block name="content"></%block> + </div> + </div> + <label for="sidebar-checkbox" class="sidebar-toggle"></label> + ${footer.html_footer()} + ${body_end} + ${template_hooks['body_end']()} + ${base.late_load_js()} + </body> + </html> + +.. figure:: https://getnikola.com/images/lanyon-4.thumbnail.png + :target: https://getnikola.com/images/lanyon-4.png + + Getting there! + +The sidebar looks bad because of yet more CSS conflicts with ``rst_base.css``. By +adding some extra styling in ``lanyon.css``, it will look better. + +.. code:: css + + /* Style and "hide" the sidebar */ + div.sidebar, .sidebar { + position: fixed; + top: 0; + bottom: 0; + left: -14rem; + width: 14rem; + visibility: hidden; + overflow-y: auto; + padding: 0; + margin: 0; + border: none; + font-family: "PT Sans", Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; + font-size: .875rem; /* 15px */ + color: rgba(255,255,255,.6); + background-color: #202020; + -webkit-transition: all .3s ease-in-out; + transition: all .3s ease-in-out; + } + +Also, the accessibility link on top is visible when it should not. That’s +because we removed ``theme.css`` from the base theme, and with it, we lost a +couple of classes. We can add them in ``lanyon.css``, along with others used by other +pieces of the site: + +.. code:: css + + .sr-only { + position: absolute; + width: 1px; + height: 1px; + padding: 0; + margin: -1px; + overflow: hidden; + clip: rect(0, 0, 0, 0); + border: 0; + } + + .sr-only-focusable:active, + .sr-only-focusable:focus { + position: static; + width: auto; + height: auto; + margin: 0; + overflow: visible; + clip: auto; + } + + .breadcrumb { + padding: 8px 15px; + margin-bottom: 20px; + list-style: none; + } + + .breadcrumb > li { + display: inline-block; + margin-right: 0; + margin-left: 0; + } + + .breadcrumb > li:after { + content: ' / '; + color: #888; + } + + .breadcrumb > li:last-of-type:after { + content: ''; + margin-left: 0; + } + + .thumbnails > li { + display: inline-block; + margin-right: 10px; + } + + .thumbnails > li:last-of-type { + margin-right: 0; + } + + +.. figure:: https://getnikola.com/images/lanyon-5.thumbnail.png + :target: https://getnikola.com/images/lanyon-5.png + + Little by little, things look better. + +One clear problem is that the title "Lanyon · A Jekyll theme" is set in the +theme itself. We don’t do that sort of thing in Nikola, we have settings for +that. So, let’s use them. There is a ``html_site_title`` function in +``base_helper.tmpl`` which is just the thing. So we change base.tmpl to use it: + +.. code:: html+mako + + <div class="wrap"> + <div class="masthead"> + <div class="container"> + ${header.html_site_title()} + </div> + </div> + +That’s a ``<h1>`` instead of a ``<h3>`` like Lanyon does, but hey, it’s the +right thing to do. If you want to go with an ``<h3>``, just +change ``html_site_title`` itself. + +And now we more or less have the correct page layout and styles. Except for a +rather large thing… + +Typography +---------- + +You can see in the previous screenshot that text still looks quite different in our port: Serif versus Sans-Serif +content, and the titles have different colors! + +Let’s start with the titles. Here’s how they look in Lanyon: + +.. code:: html + + <h3 class="masthead-title"> + <a href="/" title="Home">Lanyon</a> + <small>A Jekyll theme</small> + </h3> + +Versus our port: + +.. code:: html + + <h1 id="brand"><a href="https://example.com/" title="My Nikola Site" rel="home"> + +So, it looks like we will have to fix ``html_site_title`` after all: + +.. code:: html+mako + + <%def name="html_site_title()"> + <h3 id="brand" class="masthead-title"> + <a href="${_link("root", None, lang)}" title="${blog_title}" rel="home">${blog_title}</a> + </h3> + </%def> + +As for the actual content, that’s not in any of the templates we have seen so far. The page you see is an +"index.tmpl" page, which means it’s a list of blog posts shown one below the +other. Obviously it’s not doing +things in the way the Lanyon CSS expects it to. Here’s the original, which you +can find in Nikola’s source +code: + +.. code:: html+mako + + ## -*- coding: utf-8 -*- + <%namespace name="helper" file="index_helper.tmpl"/> + <%namespace name="comments" file="comments_helper.tmpl"/> + <%inherit file="base.tmpl"/> + + <%block name="extra_head"> + ${parent.extra_head()} + % if posts and (permalink == '/' or permalink == '/' + index_file): + <link rel="prefetch" href="${posts[0].permalink()}" type="text/html"> + % endif + </%block> + + <%block name="content"> + <%block name="content_header"></%block> + <div class="postindex"> + % for post in posts: + <article class="h-entry post-${post.meta('type')}"> + <header> + <h1 class="p-name entry-title"><a href="${post.permalink()}" class="u-url">${post.title()|h}</a></h1> + <div class="metadata"> + <p class="byline author vcard"><span class="byline-name fn">${post.author()}</span></p> + <p class="dateline"><a href="${post.permalink()}" rel="bookmark"><time class="published dt-published" datetime="${post.date.isoformat()}" title="${post.formatted_date(date_format)}">${post.formatted_date(date_format)}</time></a></p> + % if not post.meta('nocomments') and site_has_comments: + <p class="commentline">${comments.comment_link(post.permalink(), post._base_path)} + % endif + </div> + </header> + %if index_teasers: + <div class="p-summary entry-summary"> + ${post.text(teaser_only=True)} + %else: + <div class="e-content entry-content"> + ${post.text(teaser_only=False)} + %endif + </div> + </article> + % endfor + </div> + ${helper.html_pager()} + ${comments.comment_link_script()} + ${helper.mathjax_script(posts)} + </%block> + + +And this is how it looks after I played with it for a while, making it generate code that looks closer to +the Lanyon original: + +.. code:: html+mako + + <%block name="content"> + <%block name="content_header"></%block> + <div class="posts"> + % for post in posts: + <article class="post h-entry post-${post.meta('type')}"> + <header> + <h1 class="post-title p-name"><a href="${post.permalink()}" class="u-url">${post.title()|h}</a></h1> + <div class="metadata"> + <p class="byline author vcard"><span class="byline-name fn">${post.author()}</span></p> + <p class="dateline"><a href="${post.permalink()}" rel="bookmark"><time class="post-date published dt-published" datetime="${post.date.isoformat()}" title="${post.formatted_date(date_format)}">${post.formatted_date(date_format)}</time></a></p> + % if not post.meta('nocomments') and site_has_comments: + <p class="commentline">${comments.comment_link(post.permalink(), post._base_path)} + % endif + </div> + </header> + %if index_teasers: + <div class="p-summary entry-summary"> + ${post.text(teaser_only=True)} + %else: + <div class="e-content entry-content"> + ${post.text(teaser_only=False)} + %endif + </div> + </article> + % endfor + </div> + ${helper.html_pager()} + ${comments.comment_link_script()} + ${helper.mathjax_script(posts)} + </%block> + +With these changes, it looks… similar? + +.. figure:: https://getnikola.com/images/lanyon-6.thumbnail.png + :target: https://getnikola.com/images/lanyon-6.png + + It does! + +Similar changes (basically adding class names to elements) needed to be done in ``post_header.tmpl``: + +.. code:: html+mako + + <%def name="html_post_header()"> + <header> + ${html_title()} + <div class="metadata"> + <p class="byline author vcard"><span class="byline-name fn">${post.author()}</span></p> + <p class="dateline"><a href="${post.permalink()}" rel="bookmark"><time class="post-date published dt-published" datetime="${post.date.isoformat()}" itemprop="datePublished" title="${post.formatted_date(date_format)}">${post.formatted_date(date_format)}</time></a></p> + % if not post.meta('nocomments') and site_has_comments: + <p class="commentline">${comments.comment_link(post.permalink(), post._base_path)} + % endif + %if post.description(): + <meta name="description" itemprop="description" content="${post.description()}"> + %endif + </div> + ${html_translations(post)} + </header> + </%def> + +Customization +------------- + +The original Lanyon theme supports some personalization options. It suggests you do them by tweaking the templates, and +you *can* also do that in the Nikola port. But we prefer to use options for that, so that you can get a later, better +version of the theme and it will still "just work". + +Let’s see the color schemes first. They apply easily, just tweak your ``body`` element like this: + +.. code:: html + + <body class="theme-base-08"> + ... + </body> + +We can tweak ``base.tmpl`` to do just that: + +.. code:: html+mako + + % if lanyon_subtheme: + <body class="${lanyon_subtheme}"> + %else: + <body> + %endif + +And then we can put the options in conf.py’s ``GLOBAL_CONTEXT``: + +.. code:: python + + GLOBAL_CONTEXT = { + "lanyon_subtheme": "theme-base-08" + } + +.. figure:: https://getnikola.com/images/lanyon-7.thumbnail.png + :target: https://getnikola.com/images/lanyon-7.png + + Look at it, all themed up. + +Doing the same for layout-reverse, sidebar-overlay and the rest is left as an exercise for the reader. + +Bundles +------- + +If the ``USE_BUNDLES`` option set to True, +Nikola can put several CSS or JS files together in a larger file, which can +makes site load faster for some deployments. To do this, your theme needs +a ``bundles`` file. The file format is a modified +`config <https://docs.python.org/3/library/configparser.html>`_ file with no +defined section; the basic syntax is:: + + outputfile1.js= + thing1.js, + thing2.js, + ... + outputfile2.css= + thing1.css, + thing2.css, + ... + +For the Lanyon theme, it should look like this:: + + assets/css/all.css= + rst_base.css, + nikola_rst.css, + code.css, + poole.css, + lanyon.css, + custom.css, + +**Note:** trailing commas are optional + +**Note:** Some themes also support the ``USE_CDN`` option meaning that in some cases it will load one bundle with all CSS and in other will load some CSS files +from a CDN and others from a bundle. This is complicated and probably not worth the effort. + +The End +------- + +And that’s it, that’s a whole theme. Eventually, once people start using it, they will notice small broken details, which will need handling one at a time. + +This theme should be available in http://themes.getnikola.com/v7/lanyon/ and you can see it in action at https://themes.getnikola.com/v7/lanyon/demo/ . + +What if you want to extend other parts of the theme? Check out the :doc:`Theming reference <theming>`. You can also contribute your improvements to the `nikola-themes <https://github.com/getnikola/nikola>` repository on GitHub. |
