This tutorial defines Jekyll's "order of interpretation," as @swizca called it in [#5808](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/pull/5698). This tutorial makes it clear how Jekyll processes files as it renders the static HTML output.
This order-of-interpretation info is important for troubleshooting and generally understanding Jekyll. It's important to know how Jekyll generates out the files, what rules it uses, what order it processes things, and so forth.
(Note: Please process 5698 before this request, because 5698 includes the tutorial collection/navigation that this tutorial fits into. I also need to update this commit to add a link in the Tutorials nav to this topic, but I'm waiting for 5698 to be merged so that menu becomes available.)
@jekyll/documentation
@dirtyf
* master: (39 commits)
Update history to reflect merge of #5798 [ci skip]
Update history to reflect merge of #5822 [ci skip]
use logger.info
run codeclimate after success
Update history to reflect merge of #5819 [ci skip]
Fixed inaccuracy in "Built-in permalink styles" docs [skip ci]
Update history to reflect merge of #5802 [ci skip]
Update history to reflect merge of #5811 [ci skip]
Update history to reflect merge of #5690 [ci skip]
Update history to reflect merge of #5815 [ci skip]
Review CI pages
Rework CI doc to include multiple providers.
Update history to reflect merge of #5812 [ci skip]
Add jekyll-ga plug-in
Update configuration.md
Add mention of classifier-reborn for LSI
Update history to reflect merge of #5810 [ci skip]
Got that diaper money?
Added note about --blank flag
Update history to reflect merge of #5797 [ci skip]
...
Must be either:
> Rather than typing `permalink: /:categories/:year/:month/:day/:title/`, you can just type `permalink: pretty`.
or:
> Rather than typing `permalink: /:categories/:year/:month/:day/:title.html`, you can just type `permalink: date`.
I guess the former was meant to write because the latter was already mentioned in "Where to configure permalinks" section.
1. Addition of *Running Jekyll on Ubuntu* section, to address Ubuntu stumbling block as per https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/issues/5719.
2. Restructuring, and I hope I understood correctly when NodeJS/Python are/aren't required.
3. Gentler wording – it's probably not a good idea to tell punters who hit this page because they ran into trouble that installing Jekyll *is* easy and straight-forward; it *ought to be* straight-forward. (There's always the potential for pain and confusion if not all dependencies are in place.)