About Jekyll
Jekyll is a static site generator with built-in support for and a simplified build process. Jekyll takes Markdown and HTML files and creates a complete static website based on your choice of layouts. Jekyll supports Markdown and Liquid, a templating language that loads dynamic content on your site. For more information, see Jekyll.
Jekyll is not officially supported for Windows. For more information, see "Jekyll on Windows" in the Jekyll documentation.
We recommend using Jekyll with . If you prefer, you can use other static site generators or customize your own build process locally or on another server. For more information, see "AUTOTITLE."
Configuring Jekyll in your site
You can configure most Jekyll settings, such as your site's theme and plugins, by editing your _config.yml
file. For more information, see "Configuration" in the Jekyll documentation.
Some configuration settings cannot be changed for sites.
lsi: false
safe: true
source: [your repo's top level directory]
incremental: false
highlighter: rouge
gist:
noscript: false
kramdown:
math_engine: mathjax
syntax_highlighter: rouge
By default, Jekyll doesn't build files or folders that:
- Are located in a folder called
/node_modules
or/vendor
- Start with
_
,.
, or#
- End with
~
- Are excluded by the
exclude
setting in your configuration file
If you want Jekyll to process any of these files, you can use the include
setting in your configuration file.
Front matter
You can add site.github
to a post or page to add any repository references metadata to your site. For more information, see "Using site.github
" in the Jekyll Metadata documentation.
Themes
For more information, see "Themes" in the Jekyll documentation.
You can add a supported theme to your site on . For more information, see "Supported themes" on the site and "Adding a theme to your site using Jekyll".
To use any other open source Jekyll theme hosted on , you can add the theme manually. You can add a theme to your site manually. For more information, see themes hosted on and "Supported themes" on the site and "AUTOTITLE".
You can override any of your theme's defaults by editing the theme's files. For more information, see your theme's documentation and "Overriding your theme's defaults" in the Jekyll documentation.
Plugins
You can download or create Jekyll plugins to extend the functionality of Jekyll for your site. For example, the jemoji plugin lets you use -flavored emoji in any page on your site the same way you would on . For more information, see "Plugins" in the Jekyll documentation.
uses plugins that are enabled by default and cannot be disabled:
jekyll-coffeescript
jekyll-default-layout
jekyll-gist
jekyll-github-metadata
jekyll-optional-front-matter
jekyll-paginate
jekyll-readme-index
jekyll-titles-from-headings
jekyll-relative-links
You can enable additional plugins by adding the plugin's gem to the plugins
setting in your _config.yml
file. For more information, see "Configuration" in the Jekyll documentation.
For a list of supported plugins, see "Dependency versions" on the site. For usage information for a specific plugin, see the plugin's documentation.
Tip: You can make sure you're using the latest version of all plugins by keeping the gem updated. For more information, see "AUTOTITLE" and "Dependency versions" on the site.
cannot build sites using unsupported plugins. If you want to use unsupported plugins, generate your site locally and then push your site's static files to .
Syntax highlighting
To make your site easier to read, code snippets are highlighted on sites the same way they're highlighted on . For more information about syntax highlighting on , see "AUTOTITLE."
By default, code blocks on your site will be highlighted by Jekyll. Jekyll uses the Rouge highlighter (which is compatible with Pygments). If you specify Pygments in your _config.yml
file, Rouge will be used as the fallback instead. Jekyll cannot use any other syntax highlighter, and you'll get a page build warning if you specify another syntax highlighter in your _config.yml
file. For more information, see "AUTOTITLE."
If you want to use another highlighter, such as highlight.js, you must disable Jekyll's syntax highlighting by updating your project's _config.yml
file.
kramdown:
syntax_highlighter_opts:
disable : true
If your theme doesn't include CSS for syntax highlighting, you can generate 's syntax highlighting CSS and add it to your project's style.css
file.
rougify style github > style.css