- Uses new typography, including Helvetica light, larger font-sizes,
and px values
- Wider site width, larger margins, and overall more whitespace
- Responsive down to mobile
Many users moving to Jekyll from other popular blogging options (like
Wordpress) will be used to thinking in terms of pages/posts. Having a
page template like this will be convenient for those users.
- use anchor instead of h1 for site title, for semantic accuracy, and
because post h1’s should be the post title
- implement nav wrapper for nav links
- use div.wrap for design structure
Rename the pygments configuration option to highlighter to allow
different highlighters in the future. For now, the allowed values are
`pygments` and `null`.
It's now more straightforward to plug another syntax highlighter.
Per #964, just upgrade the template site from XHTML to HTML5,
leaving the existing CSS. No need to get fancy.
The HTML is essentially HTML5 Boilerplate. No need for a holy war.
Look and feel should remain the same.
It would really pain me if the default Jekyll site were XHTML. That'd be bad for the internet.
Instead, use Twitter Bootstrap as a base (while still keeping @mojombo's origin design), to give users a great initial baseline to build beautiful, simple sites.
Defaults are more than just the starting point. It's what 80% of users are going to use. Look at WordPress and the default theme. May as well lead by example and start the user off right.
* Add Bootstrap base CSS as a better reset and base layer
* Update default layout to HTML5 with boilerplate best practices
* Add title and post date to post.html (rather than including in the post itself)
* Make site title a variable and add to _config.yml
* Add page title to header
* Add default .gitignore to ignore `_site`
* Remove unused `rss.png` and `.gitkeep`
* Add Modernizr for legacy IE support