--- date: 2013-07-01 linktitle: Quickstart menu: main: parent: getting started next: /overview/installing prev: /overview/introduction title: Hugo Quickstart Guide weight: 10 --- > _Note: This quickstart depends on features introduced in Hugo v0.11. If you have an earlier version of Hugo, you will need to [upgrade](/overview/installing/) before proceeding._ {{% youtube w7Ft2ymGmfc %}} ## Step 1. Install Hugo Go to [Hugo Releases](https://github.com/spf13/hugo/releases) and download the appropriate version for your OS and architecture. Save the main executable as `hugo` (or `hugo.exe` on Windows) somewhere in your `PATH` as we will be using it in the next step. More complete instructions are available at [Installing Hugo](/overview/installing/). ## Step 2. Have Hugo Create a site for you Hugo has the ability to create a skeleton site: $ hugo new site /path/to/site For the rest of the operations, we will be executing all commands from within the site directory. $ cd /path/to/site The new site will have the following structure ▸ archetypes/ ▸ content/ ▸ layouts/ ▸ static/ config.toml Currently the site doesn’t have any content, nor is it configured. ## Step 3. Create Some Content Hugo also has the ability to create a skeleton content page: $ hugo new about.md A new file is now created in `content/` with the following contents: ``` +++ date = "2015-01-08T08:36:54-07:00" draft = true title = "about" +++ ``` Notice the date is automatically set to the moment you created the content. Place some content in Markdown format below the `+++` in this file. For example: ```markdown ## A headline Some Content ``` For fun, let’s create another piece of content and place some Markdown in it as well. $ hugo new post/first.md The new file is located at `content/post/first.md` We still lack any templates to tell us how to display the content. ## Step 4. Install some themes Hugo has rich theme support and a growing set of themes to choose from: ```bash $ git clone --recursive https://github.com/spf13/hugoThemes themes ``` ## Step 5. Run Hugo Hugo contains its own high-performance web server. Simply run `hugo server` and Hugo will find an available port and run a server with your content: $ hugo server --theme=hyde --buildDrafts 2 pages created 0 tags created 0 categories created in 5 ms Serving pages from exampleHugoSite/public Web Server is available at http://localhost:1313 Press ctrl+c to stop We specified two options here: * `--theme` to pick which theme; * `--buildDrafts` because we want to display our content, both set to draft status. To learn about what other options hugo has, run: $ hugo help To learn about the server options: $ hugo help server ## Step 6. Edit Content Not only can Hugo run a server, but it can also watch your files for changes and automatically rebuild your site. Hugo will then communicate with your browser and automatically reload any open page. This even works in mobile browsers. Stop the Hugo process by hitting Ctrl+C. Then run the following: $ hugo server --theme=hyde --buildDrafts --watch 2 pages created 0 tags created 0 categories created in 5 ms Watching for changes in exampleHugoSite/content Serving pages from exampleHugoSite/public Web Server is available at http://localhost:1313 Press ctrl+c to stop Open your [favorite editor](http://vim.spf13.com/), edit and save your content, and watch as Hugo rebuilds and reloads automatically. It’s especially productive to leave a browser open on a second monitor and just glance at it whenever you save. You don’t even need to tab to your browser. Hugo is so fast that the new site will be there before you can look at the browser in most cases. Change and save this file. Notice what happened in your terminal: Change detected, rebuilding site 2 pages created 0 tags created 0 categories created in 5 ms ## Step 7. Have fun The best way to learn something is to play with it. Things to try: * Add a [new content file](/content/organization/) * Create a [new section](/content/sections/) * Modify [a template](/layout/templates/) * Create content with [TOML front matter](/content/front-matter/) * Define your own field in [front matter](/content/front-matter/) * Display that [field in the template](/layout/variables/) * Create a [new content type](/content/types/)