Theme Info and Credits (Reverie)

Alexander Fengler · February 13, 2019

I slightly adapted the Reverie Theme for my purposes. Credit goes to the original author, who wrote the content below.


Reverie is a Jekyll-powered theme which is simple and opinionated. It’s actually a fork of jekyll-now with some additional features and personal touches which I’ve implemented to suit my needs for my blog.

This is a plug-and-play Jekyll theme which you can use on GitHub Pages without even setting up a local environment.

Features overview

  • Command-line free fork-first workflow, using GitHub.com to create, customize and post to your blog
  • Fully responsive and mobile optimized base theme
  • Sass/Coffeescript support using Jekyll 2.0
  • Free hosting on your GitHub Pages user site
  • All the SEO goodies comes in-built
  • Markdown blogging
  • Syntax highlighting using Pygments
  • Disqus commenting
  • Google Analytics integration
  • Fuzzy search across blog posts
  • Pagination of posts works out-of-the-box.
  • Categorize posts out-of-the box
  • RSS Feed
  • In-built sitemap

Using Reverie on GitHub Pages

Step 1) Fork Reverie to your User Repository

Fork this repository, then rename the repository to yourgithubusername.github.io.

Alternatively, you can use Use this template button if you want to create a repository with a clean commit history which will use Reverie as a template.

Your Jekyll blog will often be viewable immediately at https://yourgithubusername.github.io (if it’s not, you can often force it to build by completing step 2)

Step 2) Customize and view your site

Enter your site name, description, avatar and many other options by editing the _config.yml file. You can easily turn on Google Analytics tracking, Disqus commenting and social icons here.

Making a change to _config.yml (or any file in your repository) will force GitHub Pages to rebuild your site with jekyll. Your rebuilt site will be viewable a few seconds later at https://yourgithubusername.github.io - if not, give it ten minutes as GitHub suggests and it’ll appear soon.

Step 3) Publish your first blog post

Create a new file called /_posts/2019-2-13-Hello-World.md to publish your first blog post. That’s all you need to do to publish your first blog post! This Markdown Cheatsheet might come in handy while writing the posts.

You can add additional posts in the browser on GitHub.com too! Just hit the Create new file button in /_posts/ to create new content. Just make sure to include the front-matter block at the top of each new blog post and make sure the post’s filename is in this format: year-month-day-title.md

Using Categories in Reverie

You can categorize your content based on categories in Reverie. For this, you just need to add categories in front matter like below:

For adding single category:

categories: JavaScript

For adding multiple categories:

categories: [PHP, Laravel]

The contegorized content can be shown over this URL: https://yourgithubusername.github.io/categories/

RSS

The generated RSS feed of your blog can be found at https://yourgithubusername.github.io/feed. You can see the example RSS feed over here.

Sitemap

The generated sitemap of your blog can be found at https://yourgithubusername.github.io/sitemap. You can see the example sitemap feed over here.

License

MIT

Twitter, Facebook