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87 lines
3.2 KiB
Markdown
87 lines
3.2 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Create a Theme
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linktitle: Create a Theme
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description: The `hugo new theme` command will scaffold the beginnings of a new theme for you to get you on your way.
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date: 2017-02-01
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publishdate: 2017-02-01
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lastmod: 2017-02-01
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categories: [themes]
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#tags: [themes, source, organization, directories]
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menu:
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docs:
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parent: "themes"
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weight: 30
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weight: 30
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sections_weight: 30
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draft: false
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aliases: [/themes/creation/,/tutorials/creating-a-new-theme/]
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toc: true
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wip: true
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---
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{{% warning "Use Relative Links" %}}
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If you're creating a theme with plans to share it with the community, use relative URLs since users of your theme may not publish from the root of their website. See [relURL](/functions/relurl) and [absURL](/functions/absurl).
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{{% /warning %}}
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Hugo can initialize a new blank theme directory within your existing `themes` using the `hugo new` command:
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```
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hugo new theme [name]
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```
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## Theme Components
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A theme consists of templates and static assets such as javascript and css files. Themes can also provide [archetypes][], which are archetypal content types used by the `hugo new` command to scaffold new content files with preconfigured front matter.
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{{% note "Use the Hugo Generator Tag" %}}
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The [`.Hugo.Generator`](/variables/hugo/) tag is included in all themes featured in the [Hugo Themes Showcase](http://themes.gohugo.io). We ask that you include the generator tag in all sites and themes you create with Hugo to help the core team track Hugo's usage and popularity.
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{{% /note %}}
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## Layouts
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Hugo is built around the concept that things should be as simple as possible.
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Fundamentally, website content is displayed in two different ways, a single
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piece of content and a list of content items. With Hugo, a theme layout starts
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with the defaults. As additional layouts are defined, they are used for the
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content type or section they apply to. This keeps layouts simple, but permits
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a large amount of flexibility.
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## Single Content
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The default single file layout is located at `layouts/_default/single.html`.
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## List of Contents
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The default list file layout is located at `layouts/_default/list.html`.
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## Partial Templates
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Theme creators should liberally use [partial templates](/templates/partials/)
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throughout their theme files. Not only is a good DRY practice to include shared
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code, but partials are a special template type that enables the themes end user
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to be able to overwrite just a small piece of a file or inject code into the
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theme from their local /layouts. These partial templates are perfect for easy
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injection into the theme with minimal maintenance to ensure future
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compatibility.
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## Static
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Everything in the static directory will be copied directly into the final site
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when rendered. No structure is provided here to enable complete freedom. It is
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common to organize the static content into:
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```
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/css
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/js
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/img
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```
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The actual structure is entirely up to you, the theme creator, on how you would like to organize your files.
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## Archetypes
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If your theme makes use of specific keys in the front matter, it is a good idea
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to provide an archetype for each content type you have. [Read more about archetypes][archetypes].
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[archetypes]: /content-management/archetypes/
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