Code:
`
Links:
[text](url)
Images:
![Clean Xen Orchestra WEB UI](/images/cleanxeno.png)
Post:
---
layout: post
title: testpost
---
Jekyll is a static site generator that's perfect for GitHub hosted blogs (Jekyll Repository)
Fork this repo, then rename the repository to yourgithubusername.github.io.
Your Jekyll blog will often be viewable immediately at https://yourgithubusername.github.io (if it's not, you can often force it to build by completing step 2)
Enter your site name, description, avatar and many other options by editing the _config.yml file. You can easily turn on Google Analytics tracking, Disqus commenting and social icons here too.
Making a change to _config.yml (or any file in your repository) will force GitHub Pages to rebuild your site with jekyll. Your rebuilt site will be viewable a few seconds later at https://yourgithubusername.github.io - if not, give it ten minutes as GitHub suggests and it'll appear soon
There are 3 different ways that you can make changes to your blog's files:
- Edit files within your new username.github.io repository in the browser at GitHub.com (shown below).
- Use a third party GitHub content editor, like Prose by Development Seed. It's optimized for use with Jekyll making markdown editing, writing drafts, and uploading images really easy.
- Clone down your repository and make updates locally, then push them to your GitHub repository.
Edit /_posts/2014-3-3-Hello-World.md
to publish your first blog post. This Markdown Cheatsheet might come in handy.
You can add additional posts in the browser on GitHub.com too! Just hit the + icon in
/_posts/
to create new content. Just make sure to include the front-matter block at the top of each new blog post and make sure the post's filename is in this format: year-month-day-title.md
I've created a more detailed walkthrough, Build A Blog With Jekyll And GitHub Pages over at the Smashing Magazine website. Check it out if you'd like a more detailed walkthrough and some background on Jekyll. 🤘
It covers:
- A more detailed walkthrough of setting up your Jekyll blog
- Common issues that you might encounter while using Jekyll
- Importing from Wordpress, using your own domain name, and blogging in your favorite editor
- Theming in Jekyll, with Liquid templating examples
- A quick look at Jekyll 2.0’s new features, including Sass/Coffeescript support and Collections
✓ Command-line free fork-first workflow, using GitHub.com to create, customize and post to your blog
✓ Fully responsive and mobile optimized base theme (Theme Demo)
✓ Sass/Coffeescript support using Jekyll 2.0
✓ Free hosting on your GitHub Pages user site
✓ Markdown blogging
✓ Syntax highlighting
✓ Disqus commenting
✓ Google Analytics integration
✓ SVG social icons for your footer
✓ 3 http requests, including your avatar
✘ No installing dependencies
✘ No need to set up local development
✘ No configuring plugins
✘ No need to spend time on theming
✘ More time to code other things ... wait ✓!
You can use the Quick Start workflow with other themes that are set up to be forked too! Here are some of my favorites:
- Hyde by MDO
- Lanyon by MDO
- mojombo.github.io by Tom Preston-Werner
- Left by Zach Holman
- Minimal Mistakes by Michael Rose
- Skinny Bones by Michael Rose
- Jekyll - Thanks to its creators, contributors and maintainers.
- SVG icons - Thanks, Neil Orange Peel. They're beautiful.
- Solarized Light Pygments - Thanks, Edward.
- Joel Glovier - Great Jekyll articles. I used Joel's feed.xml in this repository.
- David Furnes, Jon Uy, Luke Patton - Thanks for the design/code reviews.
- Bart Kiers, Florian Simon, Henry Stanley, Hun Jae Lee, Javier Cejudo, Peter Etelej, Ben Abbott, Ray Nicholus, Erin Grand, Léo Colombaro, Dean Attali, Clayton Errington, Colton Fitzgerald, Trace Mayer - Thanks for your fantastic contributions to the project!