
The one thing I miss in the docs sweep before the last release and my friend trips all over it. God dammit software.
7.8 KiB
Themes
The theming support in coleslaw is very flexible and relatively easy to use. However it does require some knowledge of HTML, CSS, and how coleslaw processes content.
To understand how coleslaw works, a look at the hacking documentation will prove useful. This document focuses mainly on the template engine and how you can influence the resulting HTML.
High-Level Overview
Themes are written using Closure Templates. Those templates are then compiled into functions that Lisp calls with the blog data to get HTML. Since the Lisp code to use theme functions is already written, your theme must follow a few rules.
Every theme must be in a folder under "themes/" named after the
theme. The theme's templates must start with a namespace declaration
like so: {namespace coleslaw.theme.$MY-THEME-NAME}
.
A theme must have three templates which take specific arguments (to be described later).
- Base
- Post
- Index
Two types of pages
Coleslaw generates two types of pages: index
pages and post
pages.
Every page other than those in the posts/
directory is an index
.
Every page uses the base.tmpl
and fills in the content using
either the post
or index
templates. No important logic should be
in any template, they are only used to give provide consistent layout.
-
base.tmpl
This template generates the outer shell of the HTML. It keeps a consistent look and feel for all pages in the blog. The actual content (i.e., not header/footer/css) comes from other templates. -
index.tmpl
This template generates the content of theindex
pages. That is, any page with more than one content object, e.g. the homepage. -
post.tmpl
This templates generates content for the individual posts.
Here's a visual example to make things clearer:
INDEX HTML FILES INDIVIDUAL POST HTML FILES
|-------------------------| |-------------------------|
| base.tmpl | | base.tmpl |
| | | |
| |-------------------| | | |------------------| |
| | index.tmpl | | | | post.tmpl | |
| | | | | | | |
| |-------------------| | | |------------------| |
| | | |
|-------------------------| |-------------------------|
Note on Style Sheets (css)
If you only want to change the way the blog is styled, it is probably
simplest to either modify the existing default theme, hyde
, or copy
it in entirety and then tweak only the CSS of your new theme. A large
amount of visual difference can be had with a minimum of (or no)
template hacking. There is plenty of advice on CSS styling on the web.
I'm no expert but feel free to send pull requests modifying theme's
CSS or improving this section, perhaps by recommending a CSS resource.
Creating a Theme from Scratch (with code)
Step 1. Create the directory.
A theme name must be a valid lisp symbol. For this example, we'll use
trivial
, so create a themes/trivial
directory in the coleslaw repo.
Step 2. Create the templates.
As described above, we need 3 template files base.tmpl
, post.tmpl
and index.tmpl
. Initially, let's just create the simplest theme that
compiles correctly.
base.tmpl:
{namespace coleslaw.theme.trivial}
{template base}
{/template}
post.tmpl:
{namespace coleslaw.theme.trivial}
{template post}
{/template}
index.tmpl:
{namespace coleslaw.theme.trivial}
{template index}
{/template}
This will create three template functions that coleslaw can find, named
base
, post
, and index
.
Step 3. Use it in your config.
At this point, you can change the :theme
in your .coleslawrc
to
trivial
and then generate your blog with (coleslaw:main)
. However,
all the HTML files will be empty because our templates are empty!
Intermezzo I, The Templating Language
The templating language is documented elsewhere. However as a short primer:
- Everything is output literally, except template commands.
- Template commands are enclosed in
{
and}
- Variables, which are provided by coleslaw, can be referenced
inside a template command. So to use a variable you have to say
{$variable}
or{$variable.key}
. - If statements are written as
{if ...} ... {else} ... {/if}
. Typical examples are:{if $injections.body} ... {/if}
or{if not isLast($link)} ... {/if}
. - Loops can be written as
{foreach $var in $sequence} ... {/foreach}
.
Intermezzo II, Variables provided by Coleslaw
The variable that should be available to all templates is:
- config This contains the
.coleslawrc
content.
Base Template Variables
- raw HTML generated by a sub template,
index
orpost
. - content The object which was used to generate raw.
- pubdate A string containing the publication date.
- injections A list containing the injections. Injections are used by plugins mostly to add Javascript to the page.
Index Template Variables
- tags A list containing all the tags, each with keys
.name
and.slug
. - months A list of all months with posts as
yyyy-mm
strings. - index This is the meat of the content. This variable has
the following keys:
id
, the name of the page that will be renderedcontent
, a list of content (see below)title
, a string title to display to the user
- prev If this index file is part of a chain, the
id
of the previous index html in the chain. If this is the first file, the value will be empty. - next If this index file is part of a chain, the
id
of the next index html in the chain. If this is the last file, the value will be empty.
Post Template Variable
- prev
- next
- post All these variables are post objects. prev and
next are the adjacent posts when put in
chronological order. Each post has the following keys:
tags
, a list of tags (each with keysname
andslug
)slug
, the slug of the postdate
, the date of postingtext
, the HTML of the post's bodytitle
, the title of the post
Step 4. Include the content
NOTE: We can keep the template engine from escaping raw HTML by
adding a |noAutoescape
clause to commands, like so: {$raw |noAutoescape}
.
Let's now rewrite base.tmpl
like this:
{namespace coleslaw.theme.trivial}
{template base}
<html>
<head><title>Trivial Theme For Coleslaw</title></head>
<body>
<h1>All my pages have this title</h1>
{$raw |noAutoescape}
</body>
</html>
{/template}
A simple index.tmpl
looks like this:
{namespace coleslaw.theme.trivial}
{template index}
{foreach $obj in $index.content}
<h1>{$obj.title}</h1>
{$obj.text |noAutoescape}
{/foreach}
{/template}
And a simple post.tmpl
is similarly:
{namespace coleslaw.theme.trivial}
{template post}
<h1>{$post.title}</h1>
{$post.text |noAutoescape}
{/template}
Conclusion
All of the files are now populated with content. There are still no links between the pages so navigation is cumbersome but adding links is simple. Good luck!
Note on adding links
As mentioned earlier, most files have a file name which is a slug of
some sort. So if you want to create a link to a tag file you should
do something like this:
<a href="${config.domain}/tags/{$tag.slug}.{$config.pageExt}">{$tag.name}</a>
.