This is the Decaf theme repository for the JSON Resume project. This theme was forked from the Caffeine theme. Unlike the json-theme-boilerplate project, this environment has a much improved developer environment to make editing your theme super easy to do.
- Installation
- Features
- Getting Started
- Running
- Theme Overrides
- Developer Environment
- Creating your resume.json
- Building the project
- Exporting your resume
Before you can get started with this environment, it is critical that you have the resume-cli installed. Then, make sure you have node, npm, and gulp installed.
This theme environment comes equipped with the following features to make your development environment easier:
- Gulp task management integration, so you can build out your ideal development environment.
- Sass and Handlebars support to give you the full capabilties of the system and make it easier for you to build your own custom theme.
- Auto watch for file changes and automatically recompile your core assets.
- Browsersync support to auto refresh your browser whenever you make a change.
- A modular file system.
- Integration with resume-cli so you can still run the same commands against this project.
If you don't have some global packages installed yet, you can run the command below:
npm install -g resume-cli gulp-cli
When building the project for the very first time, run the following command.
npm install
This will install all of your node modules.
To run the project, simply run the following command
npm start
Running the command above will automatically build your project, load your resume with the theme, listen for changes, and automatically refresh the browser on file changes. A resume.json
will be created for you by default against the resume-sample.json
if you do not provide a resume.json
at the root directory level.
The theme provides will automatically render certain styles and icons depending on what you specify in the resume.json
or what you choose to adjust within variable.scss
. Some examples are listed below.
All the icons used in the theme are generated through Font-Awesome. So make sure the network
key that you specify within your profiles
json config matches the corresponding font-awesome style name. For example:
"profiles": [
{
"network": "Twitter",
...
},
{
"network": "Facebook",
...
}
The Twitter and Facebook network keys will be appended to fa-
to generate fa-twitter
and fa-facebook
respectively. Be sure to search within the font awesome icons to figure out the correct network name you want to use for the icon (i.e. if you want to use a different facebook icon, change the network name to Facebook-Official or Facebook-Square).
The entire about section on the left column is populated through the basics
json config. This section is intentionally kept narrow to provide a quick summary and prevent it from taking up too much real estate on the resume.
However, unfortunately it may be too narrow for folks with really long emails or website names. You can fix this in one of two ways:
-
You can simply add spaces in your JSON config to indicate line breaks to create multi-line styles. The example below will automatically put the
@piedpiper.com
into its own line"email": "richard.hendriks @piedpiper.com",
-
If you are only one or two characters away from fitting your long strings, you can adjust the width of the left column by going into
variables.scss
and adjusting the two following variables:$aside-width : 160px; $aside-margin : 20px;
aside-width
will determine how wide to keep the left column, andaside-margin
will determine how much space you want to leave between the left column and the main content on the right.
I highly recommend this to give your resume its own personal flair, If you want to change the default color used within the theme with your own custom color, change the $primary-color
variable within variable.scss
with your own.
$primary-color : $slate-green;
The most important pieces of this environment are the two app
and gulp
folders as well as index.js
. If you've already read through the jsonresume-theme-boilerplate, you should know what the files within /app
and index.js
represents.
The app folder holds all of your assets. The file system should be straightforward to follow. All views will be under the /views
folder. Most importantantly, this folder which contains resume.hbs
, which is the main Handlebars template that will be used and sent to the theme server to render your resume. The /styles
folder contains all of your SASS stylesheets.
The gulp folder holds all the modularized gulp tasks/configs. Anything gulp related should go here. Please reference gulpfile.js
as the source of truth.
This is the file that will return the HTML to the theme server and run against the resume-cli. Not much change here from the jsonresume-theme-boilerplate except that it has been modified to accomodate this file system.
This project comes with resume-sample.json
, which is a sample json resume you can build from. If you don't create a resume.json
file, it will automatically be created against the resume-sample.json
file.
It is highly recommended to create your own resume.json
for your own resume. If you create a resume.json
, this will automatically be used by the app instead. In addition, this file is automatically ignored from GIT to ensure you cannot check it in (since most likely you'll have very personal information on there). If you do decide that you want to check it in, you can simply comment the following line in .gitignore
like so:
# Keep your personal resume.json private
# resume.json
Please review the schema here when creating your resume.json
.
If you want to modify the theme but don't necessarily want to propogate the changes made in resume.json, you can easily untrack that file by running the following command:
git update-index --assume-unchanged resume.json
If you want to track the file again, you can run:
git update-index --no-assume-unchanged resume.json
When you run npm start
or choose to manually build the project using gulp
, it will generate a /public
folder. This folder will be created after running the appropritae gulp tasks against the /app
folder. Essentially, the app folder is your development environment and the public folder will be what we deploy to production. The public folder is exactly the same as the public folder generated from the jsonresume-theme-boilerplate, thus, our index.js
will still run agianst this folder.
To export your resume, you can run the following command below:
gulp export
This will automatically set up an npm link with this package to your globally installed npm dependencies and enable you to run the resume export
command from resume-cli
. This will automatically create a resume.pdf
file within your current directory. You can also specify the format by adding a format argument to the command as well.
gulp export --format html