because our bootstrap-theme.css was originally a customized
core bootstrap.css file from Bootstrap v3.0.0.
This rename helps to avoid confusion with Bootstrap’s official
bootstrap-theme.css files.
The GitHub octicons fonts, which, in our case, came with GitHub:buttons,
are not actually used on gohugo.io. Rather, the icons inside the GitHub
buttons are actually glyphs from Font Awesome.
The GitHub:buttons JavaScript code docs/static/js/buttons.js
from https://github.com/ntkme/github-buttons was referenced
in docs/layouts/partials/footer.html but never used.
Apparently, the actual code for the GitHub buttons on the upper-left
corner of gohugo.io documentation was written by @spf13 in
docs/static/js/scripts.js.
using pngquant and OptiPNG. Result:
arresteddevops-tn.png 154734 bytes → 47184 bytes
maximeguitare-tn.png 95571 bytes → 24183 bytes
ridingbytes-tn.png 262222 bytes → 66491 bytes
And a small one to an even smaller one too:
goin5minutes-tn.png 26220 bytes → 9297 bytes
Some of the thumbnails in Showcase were out of place
because of several irregularly sized thumbnails,
and some of them almost 300KB in filesize.
Resize them all to 600x400 (pixels), and use the `-tn.png`
suffix.
When necessary, the website snapshot is re-captured using
gnome-web-photo. Then, the following commands (or a combination
thereof) are used to crop and resize the image into a thumbnail,
and to reduce its filesize:
$ convert example.png -crop 900x600+0+0 \
-filter Lanczos2Sharp -distort Resize 600x400 \
example-tn.png
$ pngquant --nofs -v --speed 1 --quality 65-80 example-tn.png
$ optipng -o7 -zm1-9 example-tn-or8.png
$ mv example-tn-or8.png example-tn.png
Found on @spf13's Twitter. :-)
Prevent the testimonial dates from wrapping.
Also fix a few minor problems to get the home page
to validate as proper HTML5.
Extracted from https://www.freebsd.org/logo/logo-simple.svg
for temporary use until a future Font Awesome release adds
the `fa-freebsd` glyph (github/FortAwesome/Font-Awesome#1116) :-)
Make .fa `display: inline` to prevent unwanted line-wrapping
Also make the menu item "Issue & Help" line up with the others.
Hopefully making them more semantic and easier to read,
though it is raw HTML so it is slightly more work to maintain.
Also made minor revisions to some of the variable descriptions
to be more informative, e.g. `:monthname` in permalinks use
full English names ("January" etc.)
Make the sidebar menu slightly wider so the arrow
does not get pushed to the next line.
Also remove `text-transform: capitalize;` so we can have,
e.g., "Table of Contents" rather than "Table Of Contents".
- Change "livereload" and "live reload" to "LiveReload";
- Add a `$ ` prompt before example command lines
(not exhaustive, work in progress);
- Remove unnecessary whitespace from partials;
- Revise the blackfriday options table in overview/configuration.md
to make it narrower.
- Manually set the language for highlight.js where appropriate
- Rename "404" to "Custom 404 page", and remove incorrect reference
to "homepage"
- Credit the author of tutorials/github_pages_blog.md
(Similar notes are necessary for other contributed pages where
"I" am not spf13 to avoid reader confusion.)
- Add CSS for `kbd` and `table` etc. to css/style.css;
- etc.
updated installation page of documentation, and changed "Download" button on index.html to scroll to bottom where multiple installation options are featured
getting the scrolldown to work required removing the fixed positioning on #action and on the footer
The "@import url()" statement for loading Lato from Google Fonts
was ignored because "@import are not allowed after any valid statement
other than @charset and @import" according to the W3C CSS Validator.
Also remove the line for importing line-icons.css which no longer
exists.
Two issues are addressed with this commit:
1. Some <pre> tags were inheriting the "Serif" font on Linux, causing
"code"-ish stuff to appear with proportional-width font instead of
monospaced-width font.
2. Font stack with "Helvetica Neue" ... has been changed to default to
sans-serif instead of "Serif", this produces a more consistent and
friendlier look on Windows in particular.