Enhancing my basic-theme to add more HTML5 semantic goodness, a responsive design, and IndieWeb microformats.
 
 
Go to file
Kevin C. Coram ec18ebfeec
Add 'content-footer' block at end of main
2019-11-23 14:32:40 -05:00
archetypes (chore) Initial commit 2019-11-19 00:17:00 -05:00
exampleSite Example permalinks configuration 2019-11-19 21:50:22 -05:00
layouts Add 'content-footer' block at end of main 2019-11-23 14:32:40 -05:00
LICENSE.md (chore) Initial commit 2019-11-19 00:17:00 -05:00
README.md Add README file 2019-11-23 09:15:28 -05:00
theme.toml Downgrade min version to 0.54.0 2019-11-20 22:26:59 -05:00

README.md

A Basic Hugo Theme

While the official documentation about Hugo Templates does provide all of the pieces to get started creating a theme, it doesn't necessarily put them together in one, easy-to-see-together place. This theme attempts to pull all of the necessary pieces together into a theme that can be used as a starting point to create more sophisticated themes.

Getting Started

Follow the Hugo Quickstart instructions on how to install Hugo, create a site, and install a theme. Installing the theme as a git submodule is the preferred way.

git add submodule https://git.thecorams.net/kevin/basic-theme.git themes/basic-theme

Example Site

The theme includes an example site to give a quick way to see how the theme looks and behaves.

cd exampleSite
hugo serve [ -D ] --themesDir ../..

Most of the sample posts are intentionally set draft: true to allow for testing few posts vs many posts.

Setup

As a very basic theme, there is very little to be configured in ones config.toml file.

The layout files uses Hugo's markdownify pipe to display the copyright configuration setting, providing support both for HTML5 character escape sequences such as © as well as markdwn formatting and links.

The only non-standard configuration setting is the subtitle parameter:

[params]
  subtitle = "A sub-title for your site"

Theme Organization

Semantic Content Organization

The chrome of the theme page organization is as follows:

<html>
<head>
    <title>Site Title</title>
</head>
<body>
    <header>
        <hgroup>
          <h1>Site Title</h1>
          <h2>Site Sub-title</h2>
        </hgroup>
        <nav>
            <!-- Site Navigation/Menu: links to pages that are part of -->
            <!-- the "main" menu                                       -->
        </nav>
    </header>
    <main>
        <header>
            <h1>Content Title</h1>
            <nav>
                <!-- Content Navigation/Menu: a place holder for a       -->
                <!-- content specific menu, such as a list of blog posts -->
                <!-- based on publication date. Not yet implemented.     -->
            </nav>
        </header>
        <section>
            <!-- The page content. For list sections, this is where the  -->
            <!-- the list of pages goes. For single pages, this is where -->
            <!-- the content of the page markdown file goes.             -->
        </section>
    </main>
    <footer>
        <!-- The Site Footer, for copyright information etc. -->
    </footer>
</body>
</html>

If the content pages use ## as their largest heading, this will result in document outlines structured as:

  1. Site Title
    1. Site Sub-title
  2. Content Title
    1. Header from Content
      1. Sub-header from content
    2. Second Header from Content