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DESIGN.md

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Overall Design

  • Site-specific configuration is stored in:

    • ./site.mk: defines the stem used for this project, e.g., merely-useful.
      • This file is included by Makefile automatically.
    • ./site.yml: defines the site-specific Jekyll configuration values.
      • This file is combined with ./.config.yml (the generic configuration values) to produce ./_config.yml.
      • You must commit ./_config.yml to your repository, but do not edit it by hand.
  • Markdown source files for each human language are in a Jekyll collection named after the language.

    • E.g., _en for English.
  • Every file has a unique slug. Using the English version as an example:

    • The entry in the Jekyll configuration's table of contents is slug.
    • The file's name is ./_en/slug.md (so the file's auto-generated slug is slug).
    • The generated HTML file is ./_site/en/slug/index.html (so the URL is http://whatever/slug/).
    • The chapter ID s:slug is inserted automatically.
    • All section IDs are s:slug-something (and must be written manually).
    • The figure IDs are f:slug-something.
    • The source for all diagrams for the file is in ./figures/slug.xml (a draw.io drawing).
    • The PNG, SVG, and PDF versions of the diagrams are in ./figures/slug_something.suffix.
  • Every Markdown file's YAML must contain one field:

    • title: the file's title.
  • Lessons must also contain three lists (all Markdown-formatted):

    • questions: a point-form list of motivating questions.
    • objectives: a point-form list of learning objectives.
    • keypoints: a point-form list of key points for a cheat sheet.
  • The index.md file for each language (e.g., _en/index.md) must also contain:

    • root: true to control formatting.
    • permalink: "/en/" (or whatever the language is) to override the default output path defined in _config.yml.
    • This file becomes ./_site/en/index.html (or whatever the language is).
  • The index.md file for one language should contain:

    • redirect: '/' so that going to http://whatever/ redirects to http://whatever/en/ (or whatever the language is).
  • The goal was to use pure Jekyll to create HTML for GitHub Pages without having to commit any generated files.

    • We came close, but we can't access section headings within files in Jekyll, so we wouldn't be able to use cross-references to sections (only to chapters).
    • So we need to regenerate the table of contents in ./_data/toc.json with a compilation step and commit that.
    • Since we're doing that, we also use a script to regenerate the Markdown bibliography (e.g., ./_en/bib.md) from the BibTeX source (e.g., ./tex/en/book.bib).
  • Use Pandoc with pre- and post-processing to convert HTML to LaTeX to build PDF.

    • Run bin/transform.py --pre to read the HTML in (for example) ./_site/en/.../*.html and generate a stream with markers for problematic elements.
    • Run this through Pandoc to do HTML-to-LaTeX conversion.
    • Run bin/transform.py --post to find and convert the markers.
    • It's clumsy, but easier to maintain than a custom Pandoc template (we know more Python programmers than Pandoc experts).
  • Use the JavaScript in ./assets/site.js to:

    • Add a disclaimer to the HTML version if site.disclaimer is set true in ./_config.yml.
    • Create a table of contents for each page.
    • Patch up classes for tables.
    • Fix cross-references and references to bibliography items and glossary entries.
  • ./_includes/summary.html and ./_includes/toc-section.html loop over the table of contents to match slugs to files because Jekyll doesn't support lookup by field in collections.

    • This makes Jekyll's running time O(N^2), but there's nothing we can do about it.

Configuration Entries

./site.yml should look like this:

# Display.
title: "A Merely Useful Template"
subtitle: "Build a GitHub Pages Site and a Nicely-Formatted Book from the Same Source"
editor: "Greg Wilson"
copyrightyear: "2019"
repo: "https://github.com/merely-useful/template"
website: "https://merely-useful.github.io/template/"
email: "gvwilson@third-bit.com"
organization: https://github.com/merely-useful/
disclaimer: true

# Order for table of contents.
toc:
  lessons:
  - intro
  bib:
  - bib
  extras:
  - license
  - conduct
  - citation
  - contributing
  - gloss
  - objectives
  - keypoints
  • The keys under Display should be self-explanatory.
  • The keys under toc must be lessons, bib, and extras in that order; the only entry allowed under bib is bib, and all of the entries shown under extras should be there (though others may be added).
  • The main index file (e.g., _en/index.md) is not included in the table of contents.
  • This file is combined with ./.config.yml to create the Jekyll configuration file ./_config.yml, which must then be committed to the Git repository. (Use make lang=whatever config to do this explicitly, or let Make take care of it when doing other tasks.)
  • It's clumsy, but since there is no "include" mechanism for Jeykll configuration files, and we can't layer those files on GitHub the way we can on the desktop using flags, it's the only way to keep generic configuration values in a shareable file.
  • Read about Jekyll collections to understand the following:
    • The use of output: true to force output.
    • The use of permalink: /:collection/:title/ to turn _en/something.md into _site/en/something/index.html.
    • The use of defaults to specify the lesson layout for all the files in _en.

Typography

  • Refer to glossary entries using {% raw %}[text](#g:key){% endraw %}.

    • This minimizes typing: without it, glossary entries would all need ../gloss/ in the path.
    • The JavaScript in ./assets/site.js patches these references and sets the style for glossary references when the page loads.
    • Knows which ones to patch by looking for the leading g: in the reference.
  • Bibliographic citations are written using {% raw %}[Name1901,Name2001](#BIB){% endraw %}.

    • Deliberately similar to LaTeX's \cite{Name1901,Name2001}.
    • Again, ./assets/site.js turns this into links into the bibligraphy: the #BIB link identifies elements to be modified.
  • Cross-references are written using {% raw %}[s:whatever](#REF){% endraw %}.

    • ./assets/site.js relies on an up-to-date cross-reference file ./_data/en_toc.json to fix these (with some other language prefix in place of en if necessary).
  • External links are [text][link-name], where link-name is a key in ./_includes/links.md

    • ./_includes/links.md has to be included explicitly at the bottom of every Markdown file because including it in the template doesn't work (links are expanded before the inclusion is processed).
  • Use {% raw %}{% include figure.html id="f:whatever" src="../../figures/whatever.svg" caption="Whatever" %}{% endraw %} to include a figure.

    • ./_includes/figure.html translates this into HTML for use in Markdown.
    • ./bin/transform.py takes care of the LaTeX.
  • Use underscores rather than dashes in filenames, e.g., a_b.md.

    • Need underscores for Python source files that are being imported.
    • Might as well be consistent.
    • Should probably switch all cross-reference keys to underscores as well...
  • If you would like to add code fragments, please put the source in ./src/chapter/long-name.ext. Include it in a left-justified, triple-backquoted code block.

    • Fenced code blocks must have a language type.
    • html for HTML
    • js for JavaScript and JSON
    • make for Makefiles
    • python for Python
    • r for R
    • shell for shell commands
    • yaml for YAML
    • text for output (including error output) and everything else.
  • If you want to leave out sections of code, use # ...explanation... (i.e., a comment with triple dots enclosing the text) in the Markdown file.

  • If you would like to add or fix a diagram, please:

    1. Edit the XML file in ./figures/ corresponding to the chapter using draw.io.
    2. Select the drawing and export as SVG with a 4-pixel boundary and transparency turned on, but without including the diagram source in the exported SVG.
    3. Export a second time as PDF (selection only, cropped). We have tried automating the SVG-to-PDF conversion with various tools, but the results have been unsatisfying.
    4. Edit the Markdown file and include an HTML figure element with an ID containing (in order) an img element with a src attribute but nothing else and a figcaption element with the figure's label. These elements all have to be on one line so that ./bin/transform.py can find and translate the elements correctly.
  • When all else fails, put <div markdown="1" replacement="something.tex"> in the Markdown file and a corresponding </div> after the block of Markdown that's to be replaced by the LaTeX inclusion. This can be used for complex tables, for displaying MathJax, and so on.

Layout

  • ./.config.yml: generic configuration values set by the template.
    • This is combined with site.yml (described above) to produce the Jekyll configuration file ./_config.yml.
  • ./site.mk: Make configuration values for this project.
    • This is included by Makefile automatically.
  • ./README.md: this file.
    • Not processed by Jekyll.
  • ./CITATION.md, ./CONDUCT.md, ./LICENSE.md: how to cite, code of conduct, and license respectively.
    • Not processed by Jekyll.
    • Redundant (information is also in ./_en/filename.md) but people expect to find these in the root directory.
  • ./Makefile: re-build everything.
    • make prints a list of targets.
    • Can regenerate HTML and PDF, check file consistency, count words, etc.
    • Use make lang=xx to run commands for a particular human language (e.g., make lang=en to build the English version).
  • ./_data/lang_toc.json: JSON-formatted table of contents data.
  • ./_en/: English-language collection of Markdown files.
  • ./_includes/: inclusions
    • ./_includes/foot.html: everything needed in the foot of the page.
    • ./_includes/head.html: everything needed in the head of the page that doesn't depend on configuration variables.
    • ./_includes/links.md: table of Markdown-formatted links.
    • ./_includes/listblock.html: displays a point-form list of lesson metadata (e.g., questions or key points).
    • ./_includes/summary.html: summarizes metadata from all lessons (e.g., creates a page of learning objectives).
    • ./_includes/toc-bib.html: display the bibliography in the table of contents.
    • ./_includes/toc-section.html: display lessons or extras in the table of contents.
    • ./_includes/toc.html: display the entire table of contents.
    • ./_includes/slug/file.ext: an inclusion for the lesson with that slug.
  • ./_layouts/: page layouts.
    • ./_layouts/default.html: base layout (used directly only for the overall index page for the whole site).
    • ./_layouts/lesson.html: derived layout for all lesson pages.
  • ./_site/: if present, holds the HTML pages generated by Jekyll.
  • ./bin/: scripts used to build and check the site.
    • ./bin/bib2md.py: convert BibTeX bibliography to Markdown.
    • ./bin/check.py: check various aspects of source files.
    • ./bin/get_body.py: get the body of a page for conversion to LaTeX.
    • ./bin/get_main_div.py: get the main div from a single page (used for testing purposes).
    • ./bin/make_toc.py: make the JSON cross-reference file.
    • ./bin/stats.py: report summary statistics on completed chapters.
    • ./bin/transform.py: handle HTML-to-intermediate-to-LateX transformation.
    • ./bin/uncode.py: remove code blocks (used in spell check).
    • ./bin/util.py: utilities used by other scripts.
  • ./assets/: static files (CSS, JavaScript, images).
    • ./assets/bootstrap.min.css: Bootstrap 4
    • ./assets/bootstrap.min.js: Bootstrap
    • ./assets/site.css: custom definitions.
    • ./assets/site.js: used to clean up bibliographic citations and glossary entries, style tables, etc.
    • ./assets/tango.css: Pygments Tango theme
    • ./assets/*.svg: image files used in template (as opposed to figures).
  • ./etc/: holding area for files that aren't being used right now but might be (re-)added later.
  • ./favicon.ico: toolbar icon.
  • ./figures/: draw.io source for figures and all exported figures.
    • ./figures/slug.xml: source for all diagrams in that lesson.
    • ./figures/slug_something.suffix: PDF, PNG, or SVG export of a single figure from the XML file.
  • ./index.md: overall home page for site (currently redirects to English-language version).
  • ./requirements.txt: Pip installation requirements.
    • Run with pip install -r requirements.txt.
  • ./src/: source files used in Markdown, broken down by chapter.
  • ./tex/: LaTeX files used to create PDF.
    • ./tex/settings.tex: package inclusions, macro definitions, etc.
    • ./tex/lang/book.tex: main file for book.
    • ./tex/lang/book.bib: BibTeX bibliography for book.
    • ./tex/lang/all.tex: if present, holds the all-in-one LaTeX generated from the Markdown source.