Ananke, A theme for Hugo, a framework for building websites.
The intent of this theme is to provide a solid starting place for Hugo sites with basic features and include best practices for performance, accessibility, and rapid development.
Features
- Responsive
- Accessible
- Contact form
- Custom Robots.txt (changes values based on environment)
- Internal templates for meta data, google analytics, and DISQUS or COMMENTO comments
- RSS Discovery
- Table of Contents (must declare
toc: true
in post parameter) - Stackbit configuration (Stackbit)
Also includes examples of Hugo Features or Functions:
- Pagination (internal template)
- Taxonomies
- Archetypes
- Custom shortcode
- Related content
- Hugo built-in menu
- i18n
with
HUGO_ENV
first
after
sort
- Site LanguageCode
where
- Content Views
- Partials
- Template layouts (type "post" uses a special list template, single template, and a content view)
- Tags
len
- Conditionals
ge
(greater than or equal to).Site.Params.mainSections
to avoid hard-coding "blog," etc. [release note]
This theme uses the "Tachyons" CSS library. This will allow you to manipulate the design of the theme by changing class names in HTML without touching the original CSS files. For more information see the Tachyons website.
⚠️ If you installed a Hugo binary, you may not have Go installed on your machine. To check if Go is installed:$ go version
Go modules were considered production ready in v1.14. Download Go.
-
From your project's root directory, initiate the hugo module system if you haven't already:
$ hugo mod init github.com/<your_user>/<your_project>
-
Add the theme's repo to your
config.toml
:theme = ["github.com/theNewDynamic/gohugo-theme-ananke"]
Inside the folder of your Hugo site run:
$ git submodule add https://github.com/theNewDynamic/gohugo-theme-ananke.git themes/ananke
For more information read the official setup guide of Hugo.
After installing the theme successfully it requires a just a few more steps to get your site running.
Take a look inside the exampleSite
folder of this theme. You'll find a file called config.toml
. To use it, copy the config.toml
in the root folder of your Hugo site. Feel free to change the strings in this theme.
You may need to delete the line: themesDir = "../.."
To enable comments, add following to your config file:
- DISQUS:
disqusShortname = YOURSHORTNAME
- COMMENTO:
[params] commentoEnable = true
For any page or post you can add a featured image by including the local path in front matter (see content in the exampleSite/content/_readme.md
file for examples): featured_image: '/images/gohugo-default-sample-hero-image.jpg'
If user is using Page Resources, the theme will try and match the featured_image
from with a page resource of type image
and use its relative permalink. If no featured_image
is set, the theme will look for a Page Resource of type image
whose filepath incudes either cover
or feature
If you would like to hide the header text on the featured image on a page, set omit_header_text
to true
. See exampleSite/content/contact.md
for an example.
You don't need an image though. The default background color is black, but you can change the color, by changing the default color class in the config.toml file. Choose a background color from any on the Tachyons library site, and preface it with "bg-"
example: background_color_class = "bg-blue"
or background_color_class = "bg-gray"
This theme includes a shortcode for a contact form that you can add to any page (there is an example on the contact page in the exampleSite folder). One option is to use formspree.io as proxy to send the actual email. Each month, visitors can send you up to one thousand emails without incurring extra charges. Visit the Formspree site to get the "action" link and add it to your shortcode like this:
{{< form-contact action="https://formspree.io/your@email.com" >}}
The theme automatically adds "Follow" link icons to the header and footer and "Share" link icons to pages unless disable_share
parameter is set to true either on the site level (site params) or page level (front matter). Each built-in services sports a label, an icon and a color.
In order to register a service to be used, user must add an ananke_socials
parameter to its project configuration file and list them through it in the desired order. Each entry must bear a
- name*: It matches the built-in service reference (Ex: twitter, github)
- url*: The url of the handle's profile on the service (Ex: https://twitter.com/theNewDynamic, https://github.com/ theNewDynamic)
params:
ananke_socials:
- name: twitter
url: https://twitter.com/theNewDynamic
- name: github
url: https://github.com/theNewDynamic
If user needs to overwrite default color
and label
of the service, they simply need to append the following to the entry:
- label: The displayed name of the service to be used to popuplate
[title]
attributes and read-only. (Ex: Twitter, GitHub) - color: Used for styling purposes. (Ex: '#1da1f2', '#6cc644')
params:
ananke_socials:
- name: twitter
url: https://twitter.com/theNewDynamic
label: TND Twitter
- name: github
url: https://github.com/theNewDynamic
label: TND GitHub Account
color: '#ff6800'
On top of easily customizing the built-in services' label and color, user can overwrite their icon by adding an svg file at /assets/ananke/socials
with a filename matching the service's name.
For example, in order to use your own GitHub icon, simply add an svg file at /assets/ananke/socials/github.svg
Here is the list of built-in services. Those marked with an *
are also part of the "Share" module.
- twitter*
- youtube
- github
- gitlab
- keybase
- linkedin*
- medium
- mastodon
- slack
- stackoverflow
- facebook*
- rss
In order to add an unkown service (absent from the list above), you simply need to add all three settings to ananke_socials
: name, url, label, color, and optionally add an icon file matching the name
to the assets/ananke/socials
directory. In the absence of an icon, the theme will print the service's label.
If the theme is ran in production, pages will be indexed by search engines. To prevent indexing on some given pages, add private: true
to its Front Matter.
The theme is set, by default, to use a near-white background color and the "Avenir" or serif typeface. You can change these in your config file with the body_classes
parameter, like this:
[params]
body_classes = "avenir bg-near-white"
which will give you a body class like this:
<body class="avenir bg-near-white">
note: The body_classes
parameter will not change the font used in post content. To do this, you must use the post_content_classes
parameter.
You can find a list of available typefaces here.
And a list of background colors here.
n.b. in future versions we will likely separate the typeface and other body classes.
Ananke stylesheet is built with Hugo Pipes's Asset Bundling alone to maximize compatibiliy. The theme simply bundles its several files into one minified and fingerprinted (in production) CSS file.
Ananke uses Tachyon.io utility class library.
WARNING: Pending resolution of this discussion, Custom CSS only works with Hugo Extended
In order to complement the default CSS with your own, you can add custom css files to the project.
- Just add a
assets/ananke/css
directory to your project and add the file(s) in it. - Register the files using the
custom_css
key in your site's parameter. The path referenced in the parameter should be relative to theassets/ananke/css
folder.
The css files will be added in their registered order to final main.css
file.
For example, if your css files are assets/ananke/css/custom.css
and assets/ananke/special.css
then add the following to the config file:
[params]
custom_css = ["custom.css","special.css"]
IMPORTANT: Files registered through the custom_css
array, while unlimited in number, must be of the same type (Ex: all scss
or all css
)
Note on retrocompatibiliy for custom css: If the files registered through the custom_css
setting are not found in assets/ananke/css
the theme will expect them to live at the given path relative to the static directory and load them as requests.
If you add a key of show_reading_time
true to either the Config Params, a page or section's front matter, articles will show the reading time and word count.
Some scripts need to be added within the page head. To add your own scripts to the page head, simply insert them into the head-additions.html
partial located in the layouts/partials
folder.
You can replace the title of your site in the top left corner of each page with your own logo. To do that put your own logo into the static
directory of your website, and add the site_logo
parameter to the site params in your config file. For example:
[params]
site_logo = "img/logo.svg"
You can set the font color of the main content both globally and on individual pages:
Globally:
Set the text_color
param in the config.toml
file.
[params]
text_color = "green"
Individual Page (prioritized over global):
Set the text_color
param in a page's markdown file front matter.
note: The value of text_color
must be a valid tachyons color class. Alist can be found here.
Dates of blog posts and single pages are rendered with the default date format commonly used in the USA and Canada. It is possible to specify a different format.
[params]
date_format = "2. January 2006"
With hugo 0.87.0 and above, you can also use predefined layout, like :date_full
, and it will output localized dates or times.
See hugo's documentation of the time.Format
function for more details.
In order to see your site in action, run Hugo's built-in local server.
$ hugo server
Now enter localhost:1313
in the address bar of your browser.
To run in production (e.g. to have Google Analytics show up), run HUGO_ENV=production
before your build command. For example:
HUGO_ENV=production hugo
Note: The above command will not work on Windows. If you are running a Windows OS, use the below command:
set HUGO_ENV=production
hugo
If you find a bug or have an idea for a feature, feel free to use the issue tracker to let me know.
TODO:
- fix hard-coded link to section