Properties sourced from frontmatter in src/posts/[name].mdx
are used to create data visualizations to wow your readers.
npm install @pauliescanlon/gatsby-theme-gatstats
Add the siteMetaData
and @pauliescanlon/gatsby-theme-gatstats
to your gatsby-config.js
module.exports = {
siteMetadata: {
title: "Your blog title",
description: "I like tech",
keywords: ["tech", "blog", "boop"],
siteUrl: 'https://gatsby-theme-gatstats.netlify.com/',
siteImage: 'name-of-open-graphy-image.jpg', // pop an image in the static folder to use it as og:image
config: {
headerHeight: 64,
sideBarWidth: 240,
twitter: 'pauliescanlon', // no need to include the @
github: 'pauliescanlon'
},
},
plugins: ['@pauliescanlon/gatsby-theme-gatstats']
}
If you'd like to add more pages and posts add them to your src dir.
|-- src
|-- pages
|-- about.mdx
|-- posts
|-- year-post-dir
|-- some-post-dir
|-- some-post.mdx
|-- some-image.jpg
|-- some-embedding-image.jpg
For pages use the following template. The icon field is a path for any icon. This is an example is from Material Icons. The icon property is whats used to determine if an .mdx
file is a page or a post. Pages appear in the side bar navigation
---
title: About
icon: 'M12 6c1.1 0 2 .9 2 2s-.9 2-2 2-2-.9-2-2 .9-2 2-2m0 10c2.7 0 5.8 1.29 6 2H6c.23-.72 3.31-2 6-2m0-12C9.79 4 8 5.79 8 8s1.79 4 4 4 4-1.79 4-4-1.79-4-4-4zm0 10c-2.67 0-8 1.34-8 4v2h16v-2c0-2.66-5.33-4-8-4z'
---
# Demo About
This is about from the demo
For posts use the following template
---
title: Some Post
tags: ["Gatsbyjs", "React"]
date: 2019-11-13
status: draft // setting the status to draft hides the post from blog
featuredImage: some-image.jpg
embeddedImages:
- some-embeddedImage.jpg
---
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit.
Embedding images into .mdx
can be tricky but using MdxRenderer
we can still use frontmatter
to pass graphQL image data to any part of the post body
Add locally sourced images to frontmatter using embeddedImages
then pass a reference to them to the <EmbeddedImage />
component via props.
The <EmbeddedImage />
component is part of the theme and is passed to all .mdx
files using the MDXProvider
so you don't have to import anything for this to work.
There's a couple of optional helper props for width
and justifyContent
so you get a bit more control over size and alignment.
The <EmbeddedImage />
component accepts a width prop which can be used to control the image size. The width
prop can either be a single string which will apply the the same size across all breakpoints or an array of sizes to use across the breakpoints defined in the theme.
---
embeddedImages:
- image1.jpg
- image2.jpg
---
Post body text
<EmbeddedImage
src={props.embedded.image1}
width={['100%', '75%', '50%', '25%']}
/>
More post body text
<EmbeddedImage
src={props.embedded.image2}
width="25%"
justifyContent="center"
/>
You know about component shadowing right? By shadowing the filePath/fileName
you can replace any component in the theme with your own.
Once such component might be src/components/Code/Code.tsx
this file is in charge of formatting code snippets. For the time being the only way to format the colours used in code snippets is to change the theme used by prism-react-renderer
If you need to re-style the code snippets shadow this component and change the bits you need.