Hugo Themes
Codex
A minimal blog theme for hugo
- Author: Jake Wiesler
- Minimum Hugo Version: 0.82.0
- GitHub Stars: 252
- Updated: 2021-07-26
- License: MIT
- Tags: Blog
Codex
A minimal blog theme built for Hugo π
- An about page ππ» and a blog π
- Blog posts can be tagged π·
- Mathematical notations are supported with KaTex π
- Sass/SCSS for styling β¨
- Support for Google Analytics π and Disqus π¬
- i18n support
Prerequisites
Hugo extended version (for Sass/SCSS support).
For macOS users, the extended version is installed by default if you use homebrew
.
For Windows users, you can install with choco
:
choco install hugo-extended -confirm
Note that this theme only supports Hugo version 82 and above.
Getting started
At the root of your Hugo project, run:
git submodule add https://github.com/jakewies/hugo-theme-codex.git themes/hugo-theme-codex
Next, copy the contents of the exampleSite/config.toml
to your site’s config.toml
. Make sure to read all the comments, as there a few nuances with Hugo themes that require some changes to that file.
The most important change you will need to make to the config.toml
is removing this line:
themesDir = "../../"
It only exists in the example site so that the demo can function properly.
Finally, run:
hugo server -D
Note: If you are seeing a blank page it is probably because you have nothing in your content/
directory. Read on to fix that.
Configuring the Home Page
The site’s home page can be configured by creating a content/_index.md
file. This file can use the following frontmatter:
---
heading: "Hi, I'm Codex"
subheading: "A minimal blog theme for hugo."
handle: "hugo-theme-codex"
---
If you would rather override the about page’s layout with your own, you can do so by creating a layouts/index.html
. You can find the index.html
file that hugo-theme-codex
uses here.
Configuring Social Icons
Social Icons are optional. To show any of these icons, just provide the value in the [params]
section of config.toml
.
# config.toml
[params]
twitter = "https://twitter.com/GoHugoIO"
github = "https://github.com/jakewies/hugo-theme-codex"
# ...
iconOrder = ["Twitter", "GitHub"]
If any of these options are given, hugo-theme-codex
will render the social icon in the footer, using the order specified in iconOrder
.
See the contents of the example site for more details.
You can also create additional social icons by:
- Adding your own SVGs in
static/svg/
, for examplestatic/svg/reddit.svg
. - Modifying your site’s config as follows:
[params] # ... reddit = "<url to your reddit>" iconOrder = ["Reddit"]
Make sure that the icon title must match the icon’s file name. If the title contains more than one word, say “My Awesome Site”,
you can use dash “-” for the icon name: my-awesome-site.svg
.
Creating a blog post
You can create a new blog post page by going to the root of your project and typing:
hugo new blog/:blog-post.md
Where :blog-post.md
is the name of the file of your new post.
This will execute the theme’s blog
archetype to create a new markdown file in contents/blog/:blog-post.md
with the following frontmatter:
# Default post frontmatter:
# The title of your post. Default value is generated
# From the markdown filename
title: "{{ replace .TranslationBaseName "-" " " | title }}"
# The date the post was created
date: {{ .Date }}
# The post filename
slug: ""
# Post description used for seo
description: ""
# Post keywords used for seo
keywords: []
# If true, the blog post will not be included in static build
draft: true
# Categorize your post with tags
tags: []
# Uses math typesetting
math: false
# Includes a table of contents on screens >1024px
toc: false
The frontmatter above is the default for a new post, but all values can be changed.
Configuring Table of Contents in blog posts
To display post title in Table of Contents in blog posts, set showPageTitleInTOC
to true
in the [params]
section of config.toml
.
# config.toml
[params]
# ...
showPageTitleInTOC = true
Adding a new section menu
In your site’s config.toml
, add a new menu definition for say, “photos”:
# config.toml
[[menu.main]]
identifier = "photos"
name = "photos"
title = "Photos"
url = "/photos"
Then, put your posts under “content/photos”.
Custom styling
You have two options for custom styling. The first is to create an assets/scss/custom.scss
in your project and put your custom styling there. For example, the snippet below changes the dot’s color on your About page to blue:
// custom.scss
.fancy {
color: #1e88e5;
}
You can even use Hugo variables/params in your custom styles too!
// custom.scss
.fancy {
color: {{ .Site.Params.colors.fancy | default "#1e88e5" }}
}
# config.toml
[params.colors]
fancy = "#f06292"
The second option is to use the supported scss overrides. You can do this by creating an assets/scss/overrides/scss
file in your project. The following overrides are supported:
// overrides.scss
// The primary accent color used throughout the site
$primary: ''
Tags
Right now hugo-theme-codex
uses the tags
taxonomy for blog posts. You can view all the blog posts of a given tag by going to /tags/:tag-name
, where :tag-name
is the name of your tag.
i18n
Support for i18n
is currently available for the following languages:
- English
- German
If you would like to have another language supported, create a post in the Discussions section of the repository. You may also support your language of choice by creating a i18n/
directory in your project with a .toml
file named after the language you are supporting.
There are not many UI-related strings to override in this theme. If you are looking to support a language of your own, refer to the i18n/en.toml
file to see which strings can be overridden.
Favicon
To update favicon of the site, replace the one in static/favicon.ico
with your own.
Contributing
Check out the CONTRIBUTORS.md file for more info on how you can contribute!
Contributors β¨
Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):
This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!