+++ title = “hyde” description = “A classic blog theme” template = “theme.html” date = 2017-10-24T15:01:52+02:00
[extra] created = 2018-02-28T19:41:16+01:00 updated = 2017-10-24T15:01:52+02:00 repository = “https://github.com/Keats/hyde” homepage = “https://github.com/Keats/gutenberg-hyde” minimum_version = “0.2” license = “MIT” demo = "”
[extra.author] name = “Vincent Prouillet” homepage = “https://vincent.is” +++
Hyde is a brazen two-column Gutenberg based on the Jekyll theme of the same name that pairs a prominent sidebar with uncomplicated content.
First download this theme to your themes
directory:
$ cd themes
$ git clone https://github.com/Keats/hyde.git
and then enable it in your config.toml
:
theme = "hyde"
Set a field in extra
with a key of hyde_links
:
[extra]
hyde_links = [
{url = "https://google.com", name = "Google.com"},
{url = "https://google.fr", name = "Google.fr"},
]
Each link needs to have a url
and a name
.
By default Hyde ships with a sidebar that affixes it's content to the bottom of the sidebar. You can optionally disable this by setting hyde_sticky
to false in your config.toml
.
Hyde ships with eight optional themes based on the base16 color scheme. Apply a theme to change the color scheme (mostly applies to sidebar and links).
There are eight themes available at this time.
To use a theme, set the hyde_theme
field in config.toml
to any of the themes name:
[extra]
hyde_theme = "theme-base-08"
To create your own theme, look to the Themes section of included CSS file. Copy any existing theme (they're only a few lines of CSS), rename it, and change the provided colors.
Hyde's page orientation can be reversed by setting hyde_reverse
to true
in the config.toml
.