1.6.45 • Published 4 years ago

gatsby-theme-blog-test v1.6.45

Weekly downloads
3
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
4 years ago

A Gatsby theme for creating a blog.

Installation

For a new site

If you're creating a new site and want to use the blog theme, you can use the blog theme starter. This will generate a new site that pre-configures use of the blog theme.

gatsby new my-themed-blog https://github.com/gatsbyjs/gatsby-starter-blog-theme

For an existing site

If you already have a site you'd like to add the blog theme to, you can manually configure it.

  1. Install the blog theme
npm install gatsby-theme-blog
  1. Add the configuration to your gatsby-config.js file
// gatsby-config.js
module.exports = {
  plugins: [
    {
      resolve: `gatsby-theme-blog`,
      options: {
        // basePath defaults to `/`
        basePath: `/blog`,
      },
    },
  ],
}
  1. Add blog posts to your site by creating md or mdx files inside /content/posts.

    Note that if you've changed the default contentPath in the configuration, you'll want to add your markdown files in the directory specified by that path.

  2. Add an image with the file name avatar (can be jpg or png) inside the /assets directory to include a small image next to the footer on every post page.

Note that if you've changed the default assetPath in the configuration, you'll want to add your asset files in the directory specified by that path.

  1. Run your site using gatsby develop and navigate to your blog posts. If you used the above configuration, your URL will be http://localhost:8000/blog

Usage

Theme options

KeyDefault valueDescription
basePath/Root url for all blog posts
contentPathcontent/postsLocation of blog posts
assetPathcontent/assetsLocation of assets
mdxOtherwiseConfiguredfalseSet this flag true if gatsby-plugin-mdx is already configured for your site.
disableThemeUiStylingfalseSet this flag true if you want to use the blog theme without gatsby-plugin-theme-ui styles. Note that styles within the components you can shadow still exist.
excerptLength140Length of the auto-generated excerpt of a blog post
webfontURL''URL for the webfont you'd like to include. Be sure that your local theme does not override it.

Example configuration

// gatsby-config.js
module.exports = {
  plugins: [
    {
      resolve: `gatsby-theme-blog`,
      options: {
        // basePath defaults to `/`
        basePath: `/blog`,
      },
    },
  ],
}

Additional configuration

In addition to the theme options, there are a handful of items you can customize via the siteMetadata object in your site's gatsby-config.js

// gatsby-config.js
module.exports = {
  siteMetadata: {
    // Used for the site title and SEO
    title: `My Blog Title`,
    // Used to provide alt text for your avatar
    author: `My Name`,
    // Used for SEO
    description: `My site description...`,
    // Used for social links in the root footer
    siteUrl: `https://example.com`,
    // Used for resolving images in social cards
    social: [
      {
        name: `Twitter`,
        url: `https://twitter.com/gatsbyjs`,
      },
      {
        name: `GitHub`,
        url: `https://github.com/gatsbyjs`,
      },
    ],
  },
}

Blog Post Fields

The following are the defined blog post fields based on the node interface in the schema

FieldType
idString
titleString
bodyString
slugString
dateDate
tagsString[]
keywordsString[]
excerptString
imageString
imageAltString
socialImageString

Image Behavior

Blog posts can include references to images inside frontmatter. Note that this works for a relative path as shown below, or an external URL.

---
title: Hello World (example)
date: 2019-04-15
image: ./some-image.jpg
---

image refers to the featured image at the top of a post and is not required. It will also appear as the preview image inside a social card. Note that this requires you to set siteUrl in your gatsby-config.js file metadata to your site's domain.

When adding an image, imageAlt is available to provide alt text for the featured image within the post. If this is not included, it defaults to the post excerpt.

You may want to use a different image for your social card than the one that appears in your blog post. You can do so by setting socialImage in frontmatter.