An11ty Template
This is the default template recommended by An11ty.
The behaviour of an11ty
is to overwrite template files with your files, instead of merging them. That can be a bit of a hassle if you aren't careful, so this default site has a lot of functionality packed in that you can extend it in many ways without needing to overwrite files.
Extending .eleventy.js
Instead of rewriting the .eleventy.js
configuration file, name your file .an11ty.js
and it will be run like the normal 11ty configuration file, after the base one is run. (If you need it to run before, name it .an11ty-before.js
instead. Or do both.)
Example of adding a single filter:
module.exports = function (eleventyConfig) {
eleventyConfig.addFilter('uppercase', (string) => {
return string.toUpperCase();
});
};
If you return a configuration object, for example to change the returned templateFormats
list, your object will be merged with the default ones using a non-recursive Object.assign
.
This means to add a new template format, since it's an array, you would need to return the full updated array.
Example of only changing the HTML template engine:
module.exports = function () {
return {
htmlTemplateEngine: 'pug'
};
};
Roadmap
image resizing stuff? https://github.com/image-size/image-size
A starter repository showing how to build a blog with the Eleventy static site generator.
Demos
Deploy this to your own site
These builders are amazing—try them out to get your own Eleventy site in a few clicks!
Getting Started
1. Clone this Repository
git clone https://github.com/11ty/eleventy-base-blog.git my-blog-name
2. Navigate to the directory
cd my-blog-name
Specifically have a look at .eleventy.js
to see if you want to configure any Eleventy options differently.
3. Install dependencies
npm install
4. Edit _data/metadata.json
5. Run Eleventy
npx eleventy
Or build and host locally for local development
npx eleventy --serve
Or build automatically when a template changes:
npx eleventy --watch
Or in debug mode:
DEBUG=* npx eleventy
Implementation Notes
about/index.md
shows how to add a content page.posts/
has the blog posts but really they can live in any directory. They need only the post
tag to be added to this collection.- Add the
nav
tag to add a template to the top level site navigation. For example, this is in use on index.njk
and about/index.md
. - Content can be any template format (blog posts needn’t be markdown, for example). Configure your supported templates in
.eleventy.js
-> templateFormats
.
- Because
css
and png
are listed in templateFormats
but are not supported template types, any files with these extensions will be copied without modification to the output (while keeping the same directory structure).
- The blog post feed template is in
feed/feed.njk
. This is also a good example of using a global data files in that it uses _data/metadata.json
. - This example uses three layouts:
_includes/layouts/base.njk
: the top level HTML structure_includes/layouts/home.njk
: the home page template (wrapped into base.njk
)_includes/layouts/post.njk
: the blog post template (wrapped into base.njk
)
_includes/postlist.njk
is a Nunjucks include and is a reusable component used to display a list of all the posts. index.njk
has an example of how to use it.
Credits
Highly inspired by https://github.com/hankchizljaw/hylia