әіңғүұұқө ӘІҢҒҮҰҚӨҺ
Hi, I'm Yan.
I specialize in helping companies and researchers analyze and visualize their datasets. I excel in data visualization. If you're looking for guidance on presenting your results or building complex interactive charts, I'm the expert you're seeking.
With a solid 12-year track record in data science, I've collaborated with prestigious research institutes like the University of Queensland and leading private companies such as Datadog.
I am now working as a consultant and on my educational websites like data-to-viz.com, Productive R Workflow, and the graph galleries.
This starter contains everything you need to get up and running with SvelteKit as a static site generator for your Markdown (and Svelte)-powered blog. Check out the demo here, or view the GitHub repo here.
src/lib/config.js
static/css
and add your own links in
+layout.svelte
.Clone or download this repo, then install the dependencies and run the dev server:
npx degit https://github.com/josh-collinsworth/sveltekit-blog-starter my-sveltekit-blog
cd my-sveltekit-blog
npm install
npm run dev -- --open
That should get a dev server up and running (assuming you have npm and Node installed already). Any saved changes to components and styles should auto-refresh blazingly fast.
Now all you need to do is:
src/lib/config.js
filesrc/lib/posts
static/css
GLHF! Details below. 👇
(Feel free to open an issue if you come across one.)
Be sure to update src/lib/config.js
to reflect your site's domain,
preferences, etc. This is also where the nav menu can be updated.
It's very important to update this file with the specific details of your site. Info from this file is used in your RSS feed and SEO meta tags, so don't launch without updating it.
Adding new posts is as simple as dropping a new .md
file into src/lib/posts
.
New posts will automatically show up on the site, be added to the posts API, and
any category pages.
A few demo Markdown posts are included, and highlight some of the features of this starter. These demo posts can be updated or removed, but it may be best to use one as a starting point, just for the frontmatter properties.
If you want to use other frontmatter properties in the template (or just modify
the layout), make changes in src/routes/blog/[post]/+page.svelte
.
⚠️ Note: posts should have a date
and an excerpt
defined in the
frontmatter. They're sorted by date
, and use excerpt
in page meta tags
(for SEO, social sharing, etc.) There are also other frontmatter properties used
to enhance the site experience, like the coverWidth
and coverHeight
, which
are used in the template to reserve space for the image, minimizing cumulative
layout shift.
The starter will still work without date
properties in your posts, but the
sorting won't be right. Similarly, you can have posts without an excerpt
, but
your SEO/social previews will be sub-optimal.
Also: while there's no link to it by default, /blog/category
exists as an
archive of all your post categories.
Pagination automatically kicks in once you have more posts than the
postsPerPage
option in src/lib/config.js
. This means you won't see the
pagination right away unless you either change postsPerPage
to a very low
number, or add several more Markdown files to the src/lib/posts
folder.
Note: both the normal /blog
feed and the category feeds at
/category/[category]
are automatically paginated.
This starter also includes a basic RSS feed. It's very minimal, so you may want to tweak it depending on your XML feed needs, but it does work out of the box.
Update the config
details in src/lib/config.js
to get your site's unique
info correct. (You could also pull this info in other places, or add to it, to
keep things consistent, but that's up to you.)
By default, all CSS in this starter is global vanilla CSS. It's located in
static/css
(linked from +layout.svelte
).
I didn't use component <style>
blocks because, while component-based scoped
CSS is very nice, it can also be hard to track down and update. Since this is a
starter, I felt it was best to keep all the styles together in one place, and
let you, the author, decide whether you want to keep them as they are, move to
scoped CSS instead, or use a mixture.
(Note: previous versions of this starter came with Sass pre-installed. I've removed it now because it seems like vanilla CSS is almost entirely as powerful as Sass now anyway, and because it's probably easier for people who want it to opt in than for those who don't to opt out.)
To add or remove pages from the site's navigation menu (in both the header and
footer), edit the navItems
array in src/lib/config.js
. Items there will be
automatically added to the main menu in the header and footer, and the mobile
nav menu. They'll also have proper classes and ARIA attributes to show when
they're the current page.
This starter has a default color palette (Credit to
coolors.co) but you can easily override
those in the CSS. The color variable values can be found in
static/css/vars.css
.
Previously, fonts were loaded from Google Fonts, but now they're hosted locally, for moderately better performance and a 100% reduction in tracking.
The fonts in question are Atkinson Hyperlegible by the Braille Institute, and Fira Code by Nikita Prokopov. The fonts are open-source; please consider supporting the authors.
The font files themselves are hosted in static/fonts
. They are linked from the
fonts.css
file, and set in typography.css
.
This starter includes only a handful of structural components, for the header, footer, site nav, posts lists (since lists of posts are repeated in several locations), and pagination (plus a couple that are actually just SVG icons).
You're welcome and encouraged to create your own (using them in Markdown is fun!); I just didn't want to push authors too far in any component direction right off the bat.
Things that should just live in the site root of the finished site (like a
robots.txt
file, favicon, or maybe images) should go in the static
folder.
If you link to them, use the root path (e.g., /images/my.png
, not
../static/images/my.png
).
(Placeholder images credit Unsplash; photographer names are in the file names.)
The build command (from package.json) is simply:
npm run build
You can use that as your build command if your repo is connected to a host like Netlify or Vercel, which automatically deploys.
Or, if you prefer, you can run npm run build
locally to generate the static
files. That will result in a build
folder you can upload anywhere a static
site can be hosted.
Use npm run preview
after a build to preview the built site locally.
The directions for adding Tailwind can be found in the Tailwind docs, here.
The only thing worth noting is: this starter's existing CSS files won't be in
the Tailwind path after following those steps. You can either just delete them
and start from scratch; or, you can copy the CSS into your Tailwind app.css
file. (Or, move the CSS files into src/lib
, and import each one individually.)
It's up to you. Just note that Tailwind automatically applies some defaults, so even if you do choose to keep this starter's default styling, your site might not look the same after installing Tailwind. (Headings, for example, just look like plain text when using Tailwind, unless classes are applied.)
I assume at least a little bit of knowledge of SvelteKit and/or similar static site generators here, but be sure to read the SvelteKit docs for more info.
I've tried my best to make sure this starter is up to date with the latest SvelteKit, but I'm sure improvements can be made. Feel free to visit the repo and submit a pull request, or contact me directly.