Note for authors: When editing some text, please do not hard wrap existing lines. This plays very bad with diffs, in particular an entire paragraph shows up as changed even though it might just be a single line. Furthermore, this introduces lots and lots of merge conflicts Markdown (similar to TeX) only inserts actual line breaks when making to link breaks in the source file. Thus the most readable and diff-compatible option is to write one sentence per line and use soft-wrapping on top in editors. This is called Repository holding the sources of the KWARC.info websitesemantic linefeeds.
About
This website is built statically from Markdown source files using Jekyll.
To update a page, just modify the corresponding source and push.
This can be done online by clicking on Edit this page
in the navigation menu.
See the above links for details.
-
_config.yml
: main configuration page -
_post/*.md
: sources of the news, blog posts and activities -
_data/*.yml
: YAML database from which certain pages are automatically generated -
_layouts/*
: local style files -
_includes/*
: reusable chunks of web pages, like the nav bar -
public/*
: all static files (images, js, css, etc) -
project/
-- people -- event_activites: folders used to generate menu pages (as set in_config.yml
) -
_tagpages
: the tag pages, each tag gets an almost empty md file so that the tag page gets generated by jekyll
How to use Jekyll to test/build this website
This is a static website automatically generated with Jekyll by GitHub Pages.
Editing pages online with GitHub
You can edit any page by following the Edit this page
link in the Quick links nav bar.
Alternatively, you can directly navigate to the corresponding .md
(Markdown) file in GitHub.
This will drop you in GitHub's file editing interface, where you can modify the source code, preview it, and save your changes, by giving ashort description of what you modified. If you have write access to the repository (hint: you do), your modifications will be published rightaway. If you do not have right access, you will be asked to fork the repository and make a pull request.
Most of the pages are written in Markdown, which is a textual format for generating formatted text. Markdown syntax is very intuitive, you can get a quick review here or here.
CAVEATS: The Markdown engine used by this site is Kramdown. Its syntax definitions are slightly different from GitHub Flavored Markdown, thus the preview feature in GitHub might not render source as in the final result.
Other reasons why GitHub's preview may not correspond to the final results are:
- Use of Liquid templates in the source.
- Use of special purpose markup, HTML, and scripts, such as mathematical excerpts written in MathJax.
Working locally
If you want to do more than the occasional editing, you'll soon realise GitHub's editor and preview are too limited. It's better to work locally on your computer.
All you need to work locally is a Git client. Clone the repository and start coding right away.
At some point, you will need to preview your work, but pushing to GitHub each time you want to preview is clumsy. Your best option is to install Jekyll and the required dependencies on your machine. It is recommended to install the GitHub pages gem which provides you with the exact same versions used by GitHub to compile your site.
If you already have Ruby, the install part should be as easy as
gem install github-pages -V
Note that you will need Ruby headers (ruby-dev
package on Ubuntu) in order to compile C dependencies.
On OS X, you can just type sudo gem install github-pages -V
.
Now you can cd
into your local clone of the repository and launch the compilation by
jekyll serve -w -b''
Your site will be generated in a _site
sub-directory, and served live at http://localhost:4000/.
Any changes to the sources will trigger an automatic recompilation!
Have fun!