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Yiorgos Ynkl Blog

This is my blog, here is were I share my thoughts, feelings and reviews about stuff. I explain concepts, use notes for me and for everyone to make simple, minimal and essentail tutorials. To run the server locally: bundle exec jekyll serve To also render the draft posts: bundle exec jekyll serve --drafts This blog is based on beautifuljekyll. Learn more in the official docs for jekyll.

Tips

  • Everytime I change the _config.yml, rerun the server.

Table of contents

Features

Check out What's New? to see the latest features.

  • SIMPLE: The primary goal of Beautiful Jekyll is to allow literally anyone to create a website in a few minutes.
  • Modern: Uses the latest best practices and technologies to achieve nearly perfect scores on Google Chrome's Audit.
  • Mobile-first: Designed to look great on both large-screen and small-screen (mobile) devices.
  • Highly customizable: Many personalization settings such as changing the background colour/image, adding a logo.
  • Flexible usage: Use Beautiful Jekyll directly on GitHub or via a Ruby gem - choose the best development method for you.
  • Battle-tested: By using Beautiful Jekyll, you'll be joining 50,000+ users enjoying this theme since 2015.
  • SEO and social media support: Customize how your site looks on Google and when shared on social media.
  • Comments support: Add comments to any page using either Disqus, Facebook comments, Utterances, or Staticman.
  • Tags: Any blog post can be tagged with keywords, and an index page showing all the tags is automatically generated.
  • Analytics: Easily integrate Google Analytics, or other analytics platforms, to track visits to your website.
  • Photos support: Any page can have a full-width cover photo and thumbnail.
  • RSS: An RSS feed is automatically created, so you can even host a podcast easily with Beautiful Jekyll.

Become a sponsor for Beautiful Jekyll and unlock special rewards!

Add your own content

To add pages to your site, you can either write a markdown file (.md) or you can write an HTML file. It's much easier to write markdown than HTML, so I suggest you do that (here's a great tutorial if you need to learn markdown in 5 minutes).

To see an example of a markdown file, click on any file that ends in .md, for example aboutme.md. On that page you can see some nicely formatted text (there's a word in bold, a link, a few bullet points), and if you click on the pencil icon to edit the file, you'll see the markdown code that generated the pretty text. Very easy!

In contrast, look at tags.html. That's how your write HTML - not as pretty. So stick with markdown if you don't know HTML.

Any markdown or HTML file that you create will be available on your website under https://<yourusername>.github.io/<pagename>. For example, if you create a file about.md (or about.html) then it'll exist at https://<yourusername>.github.io/about.

Files you create inside the _posts directory will be treated as blog entries. You can look at the existing files there to get an idea of how to write blog posts. Note the format of the blog post files - they must follow the naming convention of YEAR-MONTH-DAY-title.md. After you successfully add your own post, you can delete the existing files inside _posts to remove the sample posts, as those are just demo posts to help you learn.

Customizing parameters for each page

One last important thing: In order to have your new pages use this template and not just be plain HTML pages, you must add YAML front matter to the top of each page:

---
---

This is where you'll be able to give each page some extra parameters (such as a title, a subtitle, an image, etc - below is a list of all parameters). Add any parameters you want between these two dashed lines, for example:

---
title: Contact me
subtitle: Here you'll find all the ways to get in touch with me
---

If you don't want to use any parameters on a page, you still need to use the two dashed lines. If you don't, then your file will be shown as-is without the Beautiful Jekyll template.

You can look at the top of aboutme.md as an example.

Important takeaway: ALWAYS add the YAML front matter, which is two lines of three dashes, to EVERY page. If you have any parameters, they go between the two lines.

Supported parameters

Below is a list of the parameters that Beautiful Jekyll supports (any of these can be added to the YAML front matter of any page). Remember to also look in the _config.yml file to see additional site-wide settings.

Main parameters

These are the basic YAML parameters that you are most likely to use on most pages.

Parameter Description
title Page or blog post title
subtitle Short description of page or blog post that goes under the title
tags List of tags to categorize the post. Separate the tags with commas and place them inside square brackets. Example: [personal, analysis, finance]
cover-img Include a large full-width image at the top of the page. You can either provide the path to a single image (eg. "/path/to/img") , or a list of images to cycle through (eg. ["/path/img1", "/path/img2"]). If you want to add a caption to an image, then you must use the list notation (use [] even if you have only one image), and each image should be provided as "/path/to/img" : "Caption of image".
thumbnail-img For blog posts, if you want to add a thumbnail that will show up in the feed, use thumbnail-img: /path/to/image. If no thumbnail is provided, then cover-img will be used as the thumbnail. You can use thumbnail-img: "" to disable a thumbnail.
comments If you want do add comments to a specific page, use comments: true. Comments only work if you enable one of the comments providers (Facebook, disqus, staticman, utterances) in _config.yml file. Comments are automatically enabled on blog posts but not on other pages; to turn comments off for a specific post, use comments: false.

Parameters for SEO and social media sharing

These parameters let you control what information shows up when a page is shown in a search engine (such as Google) or gets shared on social media (such as Twitter/Facebook).

Parameter Description
share-title A title for the page. If not provided, then title will be used, and if that's missing then the site title (from _config.yml) is used.
share-description A brief description of the page. If not provided, then subtitle will be used, and if that's missing then an excerpt from the page content is used.
share-img The image to show. If not provided, then cover-img or thumbnail-img will be used if one of them is provided.

Less commonly used parameters

These are parameters that you may not use often, but can come in handy sometimes.

Parameter Description
readtime If you want a post to show how many minutes it will take to read it, use readtime: true.
show-avatar If you have an avatar configured in the _config.yml but you want to turn it off on a specific page, use show-avatar: false.
social-share By default, every blog post has buttons to share the page on social media. If you want to turn this feature off, use social-share: false.
nav-short By default, the navigation bar gets shorter after scrolling down the page. If you want the navigation bar to always be short on a certain page, use nav-short: true
gh-repo If you want to show GitHub buttons at the top of a post, this sets the GitHub repo name (eg. daattali/beautiful-jekyll). You must also use the gh-badge parameter to specify what buttons to show.
gh-badge Select which GitHub buttons to display. Available options are: [star, watch, fork, follow]. You must also use the gh-repo parameter to specify the GitHub repo.
last-updated If you want to show that a blog post was updated after it was originally released, you can specify an "Updated on" date.
layout What type of page this is (default is post for blog posts and page for other pages). See Page types section below for more information.

Advanced parameters

These are advanced parameters that are only useful for people who need very fine control over their website.

Parameter Description
footer-extra If you want to include extra content below the social media icons in the footer, create an HTML file in the _includes/ folder (for example _includes/myinfo.html) and set footer-extra to the name of the file (for example footer-extra: myinfo.html). Accepts a single file or a list of files.
before-content Similar to footer-extra, but used for including HTML before the main content of the page (below the title).
after-content Similar to footer-extra, but used for including HTML after the main content of the page (above the footer).
head-extra Similar to footer-extra, but used if you have any HTML code that needs to be included in the <head> tag of the page.
language HTML language code to be set on the page's <html> element.
full-width By default, page content is constrained to a standard width. Use full-width: true to allow the content to span the entire width of the window.
js List of local JavaScript files to include in the page (eg. /assets/js/mypage.js)
ext-js List of external JavaScript files to include in the page (eg. //cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/underscore.js/1.8.2/underscore-min.js). External JavaScript files that support Subresource Integrity (SRI) can be specified using the href and sri parameters eg.
href: "//code.jquery.com/jquery-3.1.1.min.js"
sri: "sha256-hVVnYaiADRTO2PzUGmuLJr8BLUSjGIZsDYGmIJLv2b8="
css List of local CSS files to include in the page
ext-css List of external CSS files to include in the page. External CSS files using SRI (see ext-js parameter) are also supported.

Page types

  • post - To write a blog post, add a markdown or HTML file in the _posts folder. As long as you give it YAML front matter (the two lines of three dashes), it will automatically be rendered like a blog post. Look at the existing blog post files to see examples of how to use YAML parameters in blog posts.
  • page - Any page outside the _posts folder that uses YAML front matter will have a very similar style to blog posts.
  • home - The home layout is meant to act as the homepage of your blog posts - it will display all your blog posts, sorted from newest to oldest. A file using the home layout must be named index.html (not index.md or anything else!).
  • minimal - If you want to create a page with minimal styling (ie. without the bulky navigation bar and footer), assign layout: minimal to the YAML front matter.
  • If you want to completely bypass the template engine and just write your own HTML page, simply omit the YAML front matter. Only do this if you know how to write HTML!

FAQ and support

Visit the official FAQ page for answers to commonly asked questions.

Beautiful Jekyll is used by 50,000+ people with wildly varying degrees of web skills, so it's impossible to answer all the questions that may arise. For any question that's not specifically related to Beautiful Jekyll and is more about Jekyll or web development in general, the answer can often be found on Google, in the Jekyll documentation, or on the Jekyll support forum.

To receive support, select one of the different plans Beautiful Jekyll offers. You can also use the Discussions area to try to get help from the community.

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