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4 KiB
Markdown
76 lines
No EOL
4 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "Installation"
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permalink: /docs/installation/
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excerpt:
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sidebar:
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title: "v3.0"
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nav: docs
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---
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{% include base_path %}
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## Install the Theme
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There are several ways to install the theme:
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**1.** For a **new site**, fork the Minimal Mistakes repo on GitHub. If you plan on hosting your site with GitHub Pages follow the steps outlined in the *Quick-Start Guide*.
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**2.** For an **existing site** you have some more work ahead of you. What I suggest is to fork and rename the theme's repo as before, then clone it locally by running `git clone https://github.com/USERNAME/REPONAME.git` --- replacing **USERNAME** and **REPONAME** with your own.
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<figure>
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<img src="{{ base_path }}/images/mm-github-copy-repo-url.jpg" alt="copy GitHub repo URL">
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<figcaption>Tap the copy to clipboard button (outlined in red above) to grab your GitHub repo's path.</figcaption>
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</figure>
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**3.** And for those who don't want to mess with Git, you can download the theme as a ZIP file to work with locally.
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[<i class="fa fa-download"></i> Download Minimal Mistakes Theme](https://github.com/mmistakes/minimal-mistakes/archive/master.zip){: .btn .btn--success}
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---
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To move over any existing content you'll want to copy the contents of your `_posts` folder to the new site. Along with any pages, collections, data files, images, or other assets.
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Next you'll need to convert posts and pages to use the proper layouts and settings. In most cases you simply need to update `_config.yml` to your liking and set the correct `layout` in their YAML Front Matter.
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[**Front Matter defaults**](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/configuration/#front-matter-defaults) are your friend and I encourage you to leverage them instead of setting a layout and other global options in each post/page's YAML Front Matter.
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With something like this in your `_config.yml` all posts can be assigned the `single` page layout with reading time, comments, social sharing links, and related posts enabled.
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```yaml
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defaults:
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# _posts
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- scope:
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path: ""
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type: posts
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values:
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layout: single
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read_time: true
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comments: true
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share: true
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related: true
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```
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**Post/Page Settings**: Be sure to read through the "Working with Posts/Pages/Collections" documentation to learn about all the options available to you. Minimal Mistakes has been designed to be flexible, with numerous settings for toggling features on/off.
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{: .notice--info}
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## Install Dependencies
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If this is your first time using Jekyll be sure to read through the [official documentation](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/home/) to familiarize yourself. This guide assumes you've done that and have Jekyll v3 and Ruby v2 installed.
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To keep your sanity and better manage dependencies I strongly urge you to [install Bundler](http://bundler.io/) with `gem install bundler` and use the included [`Gemfile`](https://github.com/mmistakes/minimal-mistakes/blob/master/Gemfile). Minimal Mistake's Gemfile defaults to the `github-pages` gem to maintain a local Jekyll environment in sync with GitHub Pages.
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If you're not planning on hosting with GitHub Pages and want to leverage features found in the latest version of Jekyll replace `gem "github-pages"` with `gem "jekyll"` in your `Gemfile` and then run:
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```bash
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$ bundle install
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```
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<figure>
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<img src="{{ base_path }}/images/mm-bundle-install.gif" alt="bundle install in Terminal window">
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</figure>
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Depending on what gems you already have installed you may have to run `bundle update` to clear up any dependency issues. Bundler is usually pretty good at letting you know what the issue is to work through them.
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When using Bundler to manage gems you'll want to run Jekyll using `bundle exec jekyll serve` and `bundle exec jekyll build`. Essentially prepending any Jekyll command with `bundle exec`.
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Doing so executes the gem versions specified in `Gemfile.lock`. Sure you can go cowboy and test your luck with a naked `jekyll serve`. A lot of Jekyll errors I see can be tracked down to gems fighting with each other. So do yourself a favor and just use Bundler. |