Nothing really new as far as how we're using Font Awesome, but it is
good to keep up with the times and the tooling. Users that have used
custom fonts in their content or layouts will need to update their
icon prefixes from "fa" to "fas" or "fab" depending on which font
their icon comes from.
See: https://fontawesome.com/how-to-use/on-the-web/setup/upgrading-from-version-4
This makes Hugo only list "Regular" pages in the sidebar. Otherwise
if you have very few posts, for example, you might see one entry in
the list called "Posts".
See: https://gohugo.io/functions/where/#mainsections
This became a problem when I added right-to-left language support.
When you mix RTL languages like Arabic with English (even for just
dates and small strings) everything becomes jumbled. For now I have
only added translations for English (default), Arabic, and Bulgarian.
When a site is rendered in Arabic the root HTML element gets the
dir="rtl" attribute, but even Arabic sites might have an English
title or footer, etc so we should set dir="auto" on those elements.
This uses rtlcss to make a right-to-left version of the CSS and then
utilizes Hugo's Language variable to conditionally include it. Also,
we set the "dir" attribute on the HTML tag if the currently rendered
language is Arabic.
The default list template was used for paginating posts on the homepage
as well as the taxonomies and terms pages, but actually those two cases
are different. This introduces a taxonomy template that paginates based
on the current context (ie, when displaying posts for a certain tag).
Hugo 0.32 or so added the quasi-magical .Site.Params.mainSections slice
that returns a range over the section that has the most number of pages.
This way we don't need to hard code the "post" type, and instead simply
use the pages that the user has created. Hugo's quickstart, for example,
recommends users create "posts", which currently doesn't work with this
theme!
Closes#89
Use delimit function over a union of Categories and Tags. This is
much easier to read, results in correct delimiting with no trailing
comma, and works even if one of the slices is nil.
Use delimit function over a union of Categories and Tags. This is
much easier to read, results in correct delimiting with no trailing
comma, and works even if one of the slices is nil.
Some sites using edge caching like that on a CDN or S3 might have
issues with assets being cached too long, causing user agents to
refuse to load assets due to SRI hash mismatch. These sites should
disable the use of sub-resource integrity hashes using this config
option in their config:
disable_sri = true
On sites with multiple languages we need to use the absolute URL in
the test to determine if the current page should be marked "active"
in the menu bar. Perhaps a bug with Hugo that relative links end up
like "/bg/bg/about" instead of "/bg/about".
Don't try to get image information when the image isn't local. We
generally expect that images are in the local filesystem's static
directory, but if the user has specified a remote image—ie, with
an http:// or https:// prefix—then we shouldn't try imageConfig.
This reverts commit bf9bca9656.
If the user specifies a non-local image then the build generates
an error. See #56. We need to have a way to only get imageInfo for
local images...
I had overridden Hugo's OpenGraph template to improve it, but those
changes have been upstreamed in Hugo 0.19. We can use theirs now.
See: https://github.com/spf13/hugo/pull/3073
I had overridden it in the theme to improve the metadata generated
by it. Hugo has accepted the changes upstream so we can use theirs
now.
See: https://github.com/spf13/hugo/pull/2984
Hugo 0.18 introduced the imageConfig function which allows you to
access the height and width of images, which makes bots consuming
the structured data happy.
.Site.LastChange is the date of the last modification on the entire
site, not necessarily on the node we're currently showing, such as
a taxonomy list.
I'm not sure if it really matters to bots who will parse this (it's
much more important on content pages of course), but using .Date on
nodes like the homepage and taxonomy terms pages will set the date
to be that of the latest post in that range—to me this does indeed
seem to be "time when the object was last updated"[0].
[0] https://developers.facebook.com/docs/reference/opengraph/object-type/website/