.. | ||
blog | ||
cmd | ||
favicons | ||
fonts | ||
get | ||
home | ||
learn | ||
ref | ||
sponsor | ||
tools | ||
.gitignore | ||
gen-fonts.elv | ||
go.mod | ||
go.sum | ||
home.md | ||
icon-font.css | ||
index.toml | ||
Makefile | ||
README.md | ||
reset.css | ||
style.css | ||
template.html |
Source for Elvish's website
This directory contains source for Elvish's official website.
The documents are written in CommonMark sprinkled with
some HTML and custom macros. Most of them can be viewed directly in GitHub;
notable exceptions are the homepage (home.md
) and the download page
(get/prelude.md
).
Building
The website is a collection of static HTML files, built from Markdown files with a custom toolchain. You need the following software to build it:
-
Go, with the same version requirement as Elvish itself.
-
GNU Make (any "reasonably modern" version should do).
To build the website, just run make
. The built website is in the _dst
directory. You can then open _dst/index.html
or run an HTTP server within
_dst
to preview.
NOTE: Although the website degrades gracefully when JavaScript is disabled,
local viewing works best with JavaScript enabled. This is because relative paths
like ./get
will cause the browser to open the corresponding directory, instead
of the index.html
file under it, and we use JavaScript to patch such URLs
dynamically.
Additional workflows
-
Run
make check-rellinks
to ensure that relative links between pages are valid. -
Run
make Elvish.docset
to build a docset containing all the reference docs. Docset is a format for packaging documentation for offline consumption.
Both workflows use a Python script under the hood, and require Python 3 and
Beautiful Soup 4 (install with pip install --user bs4
).
Transcripts
Documents can contain transcripts of Elvish sessions, identified by the
language tag elvish-transcript
. A simple example:
```elvish-transcript
~> echo foo |
str:to-upper (one)
▶ FOO
```
When the website is built, the toolchain will highlight the
echo foo | str:to-upper (one)
part correctly as Elvish code.
To be exact, the toolchain uses the following heuristic to determine the range of Elvish code:
-
It looks for what looks like a prompt, which starts with either
~
or/
, ends with>
and a space, with no spaces in between. -
It then extends the range downwards, as long as the line starts with N whitespaces, where N is the length of the prompt (including the trailing space).
As long as you use Elvish's default prompt, you should be able to rely on this heuristic.
Ttyshots
Some of the pages include "ttyshots" that show the content of Elvish sessions.
They are HTML files with terminal attributes converted to CSS classes, generated
from corresponding instruction files. By convention, the instruction files have
names ending in -ttyshot.elvts
(because they are syntactically Elvish
transcripts), and the generated HTML files have names ending in -ttyshot.html
.
The generation process depends on tmux
and a
built elvish
in PATH
. Windows is not supported.
Instruction syntax
Ttyshot instruction files look like Elvish transcripts, with the following differences:
-
It should not contain the output of commands. Anything that is not part of an input at a prompt causes a parse error.
-
If the Elvish code starts with
#
followed immediately by a letter, it is treated instead as a command to sent totmux
.The most useful one (and only one being used now) is
send-keys
.
For example, the following instructions runs cd /tmp
, and sends Ctrl-N to
trigger navigation mode at the next prompt:
~> cd /tmp
~> #send-keys C-N
Generating ttyshots
Unlike other generated website artifacts, generated ttyshots are committed into
the repository, and the Makefile
rule to generate them is disabled by default.
This is because the process to generate ttyshots is relatively slow and may have
network dependencies.
To turn on ttyshot generation, pass TTYSHOT=1
to make
(where 1
can be
replaced by any non-empty string). For example, to generate a single ttyshot,
run make TTYSHOT=1 foo-ttyshot.html
. To build the website with ttyshot
generation enabled, run make TTYSHOT=1
.
The first time you generate ttyshots, make
will build the ttyshot
tool, and
regenerate all ttyshots. Subsequent runs will only regenerate ttyshots whose
instruction files have changed.
Commit History
These files used to live in a separate repository. However, because @xiaq did not merge the repositories in the correct way (he simply copied all the files), the commit history is lost. Please see that repository for a full list of contributors.