Infinite scroll for Jekyll based blogs. See it in action at tobiasahlin.com/blog/.
Add the js
folder and all-posts.json
to the root of your Jekyll site. If you're not already using jQuery, open _layouts/default.html
and include it:
<script src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.10.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
In _layouts/default.html
, include infinite-jekyll.js
after jQuery:
<script src="/js/infinite-jekyll.js"></script>
How fun is it to only see links? Open up index.html
. Find this line:
<li><span>{{ post.date | date_to_string }}</span> » <a href="{{ post.url }}">{{ post.title }}</a></li>
Remove everything within the li
. Open up _layouts/post.html
and copy the markup for single posts. Paste it within the li
, and replace every instance of page.
with post.
. This is how it should look using the default markup:
<li>
<h2>{{ post.title }}</h2>
<p class="meta">{{ post.date | date_to_string }}</p>
<div class="post">
{{ post.content }}
</div>
</li>
Per default, Jekyll will render all posts in your entire archive. For lazy loading to make sense, we need to set a limit. Open up index.html
and find this line:
{% for post in site.posts %}
Change it to:
{% for post in site.posts limit: 10 %}
You can change 10
to whatever number you like. The same number will be used for lazy loading new posts, so 10
will render 10 static post, and then fetch another 10 posts every time you get near the bottom of the page.
You should see your 10 latest posts on the front page, but no infinite scroll yet. Infinite Jekyll will only try to lazy load posts if there's a spinner present. At the very end of index.html
, add the spinner:
<div class="infinite-spinner"></div>
spinner.css
contains a simple CSS spinner that works in most modern browsers. Open up css/main.css
, and at the very end, paste everything from spinner.css
.
And you're done. Happy scrolling!