This is the source to Jupyter.org.
The site is built using GitHub Pages Jekyll, see Jekyll website for customizing the build process, and detail on how what where.
Clone this repository locally, and cd into it:
git clone https://github.com/jupyter/jupyter.github.io
cd jupyter.github.io
Install bundler
, and use it to install the dependencies to build the website:
gem install bundler
bundle install
Now you can ask Jekyll to build the website.
bundle exec jekyll serve liveserve
Open your browser to localhost:4000.
Edit the various parts, the liveserve
option should automatically rebuild and
refresh the pages when changes occur.
To stop serving the website, press Ctrl
-C
in your terminal
Enjoy.
Most pages are located at the place where their URL is, nothing fancy. Headers
and footer are in _includes/head.html
, _includes/header.html
,
_includes/footer.html
.
The navbar is in _data/nav.yml
and looks like that:
head:
- Home
- title: Install
url: https://jupyter.readthedocs.io/en/latest/install.html
- About
- title: Documentation
url: https://jupyter.readthedocs.io/en/latest/install.html
- title: Blog
url: https://blog.jupyter.org
- Donate
which means, insert in order the following links into the navbar:
- Link to `Home` page, guess the url by yourself.
- link to `Install` page, the url is...
- Link to `About`, guess the url by yourself,
- ... etc.
The navbar will automatically target _blank
pages where the url is explicit,
and mark the correct link as the "current" one.
Create my_page.html
(will have url https://jupyter.org/my_page.html
)
or my_page/index.html
(will have url https://jupyter.org/my_page/
), start with the following:
---
layout: default
title: My Page
---
write some html here (consider you are already inside `<body></body>`)
You cannot do it yet with .md file, but you will be able soon.
Add commit (and don't forget to add to _data/nav.yml
).
Travis will run and test:
- jekyll build
- html-proofer
- csslint
Netlify is used to provide a link to a rendered website with the changes proposed in a PR. This convenience helps reviewers see how the change would look before it is deployed in production.
The link is found in the GitHub PR status box. In the deploy/netlify section,
click on the Details
link.