Forever Jekyll
is a theme-template-boilerplate for Jekyll
. Primary goal of Forever Jekyll
is to make the task of building a personal website with Jekyll
so easy that even a person with non-computing background should be able to do it with ease.
In an era of internet everyone should have a personal website or a blog. Their own personal space on WWW
. It shouldn't be too difficult to own a personal web space in 21st century, right? Yes, right but apparently it is not that easy. To be honest it is difficult and confusing. It shouldn't be, but is. Blogger
has long been dead. Weebly
and Wix
are not up to the quality mark to say the least. WordPress
and ghost
are not free. Site generators like Jekyll
, Hugo
, Grav
, Gatsby
, Pelican
are great but they all require a fair amount of expertise in programming language(s) and a very good knowledge of computers and operating system(s), plus you'll have to host the created site somewhere on your own. This is one of the primary reasons why so many people with a dream of starting a blog or creating their own website end-up leaving their dreams unfulfilled. Now picture is not entirely black, there are a few options and solutions out there that can help an average person create his/her own blog/site without too many hassles and for free. Free as in Beer and free as in Freedom too. Forever Jekyll
is one of them.
As the name suggests Forever Jekyll
is based on static site generator Jekyll
but it eliminates almost all of the up front setup. No need to install/setup things like Ruby
, RubyGems
and no knowledge of HTML
, JavaScript
and CSS
is required. All you'll need to create a blog or a site with Forever Jekyll
is a computer, a browser and of-course an internet connection. Believe me that's all you'll need and in only a few minutes you'll have your own personal website up and running.
Before continuing I'm sure you would want to know what Forever Jekyll
has to offer beside the aforementioned ease of getting started. Here are some of its notable features,
- Simple, clean and distraction free layout.
- Responsive theme design.
- Mobile optimized theme.
- Good looking and readable font stack.
- Font Awesome icon set.
- Search engine optimization.
- Sass/SCSS preprocessor support.
- Privacy friendly commenting system (optional).
- Privacy friendly analytics system (optional).
- Syntax highlighting.
- Multimedia content (Video, Audio, Images, Playlists, Maps) embedding.
- Lightbox for images and videos.
- Math typesetting.
- Diagrams and charts.
- Social sharing buttons for over 10 social networks.
- Page navigation (pagination).
- Post navigation.
- Post categories.
- Post read time.
- Site search.
- RSS feed.
- Emojis.
- And last but not the least free hosting support out-of-the-box.
Not convinced yet about Forever Jekyll
? Here is a live demo of Forever Jekyll
,
🎺🎺 Live Demo of Forever Jekyll 🎺🎺
Hopefully that live demo has convinced you, hasn't it? Great! Continue with me...
In the top-right corner of this page, click Fork
.
GitHub
will prompt you to sign in. If you don't have a GitHub
account you can easily create one from that page.
Next rename your newly forked repository to yourgithubusername.github.io
. This is an important step.
For example your GitHub
user name is elaine-thompson
then name of your repository will be,
elaine-thompson.github.io
Another example. If your GitHub
user name is bolt-usain
then name of your repository will be,
bolt-usain.github.io
That's it. Your site will be available a few seconds later at https://yourgithubusername.github.io
- if not, give it a few minutes as GitHub
suggests and it'll appear soon.
Now that your site is up and running it's time to customize it and truly make it yours.
Click on _config.yml
file in your repository and next click on the pencil icon
on the right hand corner.
First thing you'd want to change in this file is the name of your website. Edit the following line with your desired site name,
name: Forever Jekyll
Next, it's time to change the description of your website. To do so edit this line,
description: A simple, elegant and full featured Jekyll theme
And finally change the url to your sites url,
url: https://forever-jekyll.github.io
You can add links to some or all of your social networks, online accounts, emails, even phone numbers if you wish to the footer at the bottom of your site.
To do so you need to edit the footer_links:
section in the file. Remove the ones used by the theme first and then add some of your accounts.
For example you can add a link to your Facebook
account like this,
- title: Facebook
url: https://facebook.com/your.facebook.username
icon: fa fa-facebook-square
One more example. To add Your reddit
account you need to add this to footer_links:
,
- title: reddit
url: https://www.reddit.com/user/your.reddit.username
icon: fa fa-reddit-square
Save the file by clicking on Commit changes
button in the bottom left.
Time to add your avatar and favicons to your site.
Avatar first. Select an image that you want to use as your site avatar. Scale it down to 70x70 and save it as avatar.png
file. There are many tools out there to do so and if you don't know any I'd suggest mtPaint
.
Next in your repository navigate to the folder assets
and then open the folder image
. Click on the avatar.png
file and delete it by clicking on trashcan icon
at the top right and save the action by clicking on Commit changes
button at the bottom left.
Go back to image
folder and in the top right part click on Add file
-> Upload files
and from there upload your own avatar.png
file. Don't forget to save it by clicking on Commit changes
button.
Okay now it's time for favicons. A favicon is a site icon. You'll need an image in png
format for this. Once you are ready with your image, open the following website and use it to generate the favicons,
This site will let you download the generated favicons in a zip file. Unzip that file and then in your GitHub
repository go to assets
-> image
folder and upload all the extracted image files via Add file
-> Upload files
. Don't upload any xml
or json
files please.
In your repository there is a file named about.md
. Open it and add some content related to your site/blog. You can write a short description about yourself, your background, about your website. Possibilities are endless. Try and make this page interesting. Adding a picture is always a good idea. You can also share ways to contact you on this page if you wish. Once you have finished writing a killer introduction to you and your site, don't forget to save the changes by clicking on Commit changes
button at the bottom left.
Comments are not enabled by default in Forever Jekyll
but this functionality can easily be added.
Forever Jekyll
uses Cactus Comments
. It is a privacy respecting federated comment system built on Matrix protocol.
Cactus Comments
is completely free and open source.
First you need to register your site with Cactus Comments
. To do so, click on the following link,
chat with @cactusbot:cactus.chat
Clicking on that link will take you to the Matrix
page and you'll be prompted to choose an app to continue.
Select Element
and click on continue
.
On the next page click on Continue in your browser
.
On the next page click on Send a Direct Message
. It'll prompt you to either Sign In
or to Create Account
.
After signing in to your account send following text as a direct message,
register <YOUR-SITE-NAME>
For example,
register elaine-thompson.github.io
50% of work done.
Right click on the following link and select Save link as...
option and save the file with the name default.html
.
Right click on the following link and again select Save link as...
option and save the file with the name post.html
.
Save the following link with the name _cactus.scss
just like we did earlier.
Now Navigate back to your site repository and open the folder _layouts
.
Upload the default.html
file via Add file
-> Upload files
option.
Open this file default.html
in your site repository and go to the line number 120,
siteName: "elaine-thompson.github.io",
Replace elaine-thompson.github.io
with the site name you just registered on Cactus Comments
.
Don't forget to save the changes by clicking on Commit Changes
button.
Next upload the post.html
file to the folder _layouts
via Add file
-> Upload files
option.
In your site repository go to folder _sass
and upload _cactus.scss
file via Add file
-> Upload files
option.
And finally open the file style.scss
in your site repository. Add the following line at the very end of the file,
@import "cactus";
Save the changes by clicking on Commit Changes
button.
That's it. Kudos! You have successfully enabled commenting system on your site.
Like comments web analytics is not enabled by default in Forever Jekyll
but this can easily be added.
Forever Jekyll
uses GoatCounter
. It is an open source and privacy friendly web analytics platform.
GoatCounter
is free for non-commercial use. To sign up for GoatCounter
click open the following link,
Next navigate back to your site repository and open the file default.html
in the folder _layouts
.
Right at the end of the file you'll see following closing tags,
</body>
</html>
Add the following snippet right before those closing tags,
<script data-goatcounter="https://MYCODE.goatcounter.com/count"
async src="//gc.zgo.at/count.js"></script>
Of-course you'll have to replace MYCODE
in the snippet above with your actual GoatCounter
code acquired during the sign up.
Save the changes by clicking on Commit Changes
button.
Well-done! You have successfully enabled an ethical and privacy friendly web analytics system for your site.
If you like Forever Jekyll
, please consider supporting it, even the smallest contribution goes a long way:
The _posts
folder is where your blog posts live.
Posts in Jekyll
are text files and Jekyll
provides everything you need to turn it into a blog.
Jekyll
posts are typically written in Markdown
but you can also write in HTML
if you wish.
All post files must begin with front matter. What's a front matter?
A front matter is typically used to set a layout or other meta data.
But at this point in time all that technical stuff is strictly not necessary for you to remember.
All you need to remember is, you'll have to begin every new post with following snippet,
---
layout: post
title: Title of your post
categories: [category 1, category 2]
---
title:
in the above snippet is obviously the title of your post.
categories:
A blog category can either be a word or a group of words separated by a comma.
Choose them wisely and use them to give a gist of the post or post's content.
Categories
can play a crucial role in organizing your site’s posts properly. It is also considered a good SEO practice.
Categories
makes it easy for your potential web visitors to navigate around your site and offers a good user experience.
Now coming to actual writing. Markdown
doesn't require any special application. You can write in Markdown
everywhere.
Here is a very good resource to get you started with Markdown
=> Markdown Cheatsheet.
But for someone who is new to Markdown
I would recommend any of these three editors,
After you have completed your post, you'll have to save the post file in _posts
folder in your repository.
Jekyll
is very particular about the post filename format. Every post filename must follow this format,
YEAR-MONTH-DAY-title.md
An example,
2011-12-31-new-years-eve-is-awesome.md
One more example,
2012-09-12-how-to-write-a-blog.md
A bit odd but not that difficult, right?!?
I've included a sample post in _posts
directory to get you started. Feel free to delete it when you are ready with your first post.
I'm pretty sure that this should be good enough for almost everyone to get started with Forever Jekyll
in particular and Blogging
in general.
But I'm also aware that I must have missed a few things in this README and there will be a few unexplained things left behind.
In such a case feel free to start a discussion. Everything related to ForeverJekyll
is welcome.
Your personal website or blog might not change the world but it will certainly change you.
~ Me
It is necessary to write, if the days are not to slip emptily by. How else, indeed, to clap the net over the butterfly of the moment? for the moment passes, it is forgotten; the mood is gone; life itself is gone.
~ Vita Sackville-West