This is a template for a public gh-pages webpage for DSSG summer projects which can be freely hosted online.
Github Pages are static webpages, i.e. the content (mainly .html
and .css
) is sent to the user's browser and executed there (no backend server). That said, they actually can contain some interactive content which is in .javascript
. The advantage is that one does not need to know these languages, all we need is to write text in markdown
(thanks to numerous options of Jekyll Templates) Github Pages can be used for a lot of different scenarios:
-
examples of older DSSG projects: Food Safety Project, Disaster Damage Detection Project
-
example of tutorial content: git novice lesson, lesson template
-
example of a personal blog: academic blog template
For simplicity we suggest to create a separate repo for the webpage (separate from the code). We will also provide the option to set it up for the repo that you already have, but that will require more git work. If needed ownership and website name can be changed in the future, so pick something as a starting point.
- decide on a name for the repository: we suggest to follow the format
DSSGYEAR-name-of-repo
(it will determine the webpage url) - provide an eScience Data Scientist with the name and the usernames of all the team members
- we will create a repo under the uwescience organization for you and the final address will be uwescience.github.io/DSSGYEAR-name-of-repo (select
uwescience/DSSG-website-template
as a Repository Template) - enable publishing through the main branch (Settings -> Pages in the left panel)
- add a link on the right for quick access to the webpage (pay attention to how the url is created)
- create a gh-pages branch (make it orphan so that it does not have any history)
- remove all tracked files from it
- pull the files from the template
- push to github the changes to create a public gh-pages branch
- enable publishing through the gh-pages branch (Settings -> GitHub-Pages)
# make an orphan branch
git checkout --orphan gh-pages
# preview files to be deleted
git rm -rf --dry-run .
# actually delete the files
git rm -rf .
# get the template
git pull https://github.com/uwescience/DSSG-website-template
# push the local branch to a public branch on github
git push origin gh-pages
- Modify your project name in the
_config.yml
file
-
Each page is a markdown document
-
Markdown is a text marking language designed for the web
-
You can modify the markdown documents from the website (hit the edit button and commit when finished)
- You can also clone the repo (or your fork of it) and make modifications locally
- Macdown Editor for Mac
- MarkdownPad for Windows
- Visual Studio Code
-
-
If you want to preview the webpage locally you need to install Jekyll(it is a bit involved), then run
bundle exec jekyll serve
-
You can modify your pages by setting up the sidebar:
-
Images go into assets/img
-
they can be accessed by:
<img src="{{ site.url }}{{ site.baseurl }}/assets/img/eScience.png">
-
to upload images through the website you need to have push access (otherwise do it locally and submit a pull request)
-
feel free to have a different header image relevant to your project
-
-
Some colors and fonts are set in the
.css file
-
The theme that we are using is called Hyde: you can read more details about it below. Feel free to use a different theme (gh-pages themes, Jekyll themes), but you will have to figure out how to change it on your own. There are some options to make some of the content executable using the JupyterBook template. Minima is another very simplistic theme which can include a blog and be adapted as you wish.
-
If you do not want to rush, make your writings visible on the website, you can work in a fork, or simply work on a markdown file which you can share with your teammates for review (check out https://hackmd.io/ for collaborative markdown editing for up to 4 people)).
Hyde is a brazen two-column Jekyll theme that pairs a prominent sidebar with uncomplicated content. It's based on Poole, the Jekyll butler.
Hyde is a theme built on top of Poole, which provides a fully furnished Jekyll setup—just download and start the Jekyll server. See the Poole usage guidelines for how to install and use Jekyll.
Hyde includes some customizable options, typically applied via classes on the <body>
element.
Create a list of nav links in the sidebar by assigning each Jekyll page the correct layout in the page's front-matter.
---
layout: page
title: About
---
Why require a specific layout? Jekyll will return all pages, including the atom.xml
, and with an alphabetical sort order. To ensure the first link is Home, we exclude the index.html
page from this list by specifying the page
layout.
By default Hyde ships with a sidebar that affixes it's content to the bottom of the sidebar. You can optionally disable this by removing the .sidebar-sticky
class from the sidebar's .container
. Sidebar content will then normally flow from top to bottom.
<!-- Default sidebar -->
<div class="sidebar">
<div class="container sidebar-sticky">
...
</div>
</div>
<!-- Modified sidebar -->
<div class="sidebar">
<div class="container">
...
</div>
</div>
Hyde ships with eight optional themes based on the base16 color scheme. Apply a theme to change the color scheme (mostly applies to sidebar and links).
There are eight themes available at this time.
To use a theme, add anyone of the available theme classes to the <body>
element in the default.html
layout, like so:
<body class="theme-base-08">
...
</body>
To create your own theme, look to the Themes section of included CSS file. Copy any existing theme (they're only a few lines of CSS), rename it, and change the provided colors.
Hyde's page orientation can be reversed with a single class.
<body class="layout-reverse">
...
</body>
Hyde has two branches, but only one is used for active development.
master
for development. All pull requests should be submitted againstmaster
.gh-pages
for our hosted site, which includes our analytics tracking code. Please avoid using this branch.
Mark Otto
Open sourced under the MIT license.
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