Library setup
By now, you should have followed the
Installation
instructions. You should have Hugo and Node installed, and a local copy of a forked version of Infusion. You should also have run npm install
in the root of that codebase.
“Cleaning” the content folder
Before you can start documenting patterns, there are a few things still to do in order to get set up. At the moment, your version of Infusion is a facsimile of the original, containing all this documentation content. We want to delete that content and replace it with some starter content. There’s a simple clean
command for this.
npm run clean
This will leave your content
folder with just an _index.md
file and a patterns
folder containing a single demonstration pattern file. Find out more about these in
Library structure
.
The setup
command
There’s another command, setup
, which you need to run to create an initial build and make sure git is aware of the public
folder it generates.
npm run setup
The config file
You’ll also want to name your library and configure one or two other things in the config.toml
file that’s found at the root of your project. Here’s how that file looks:
languageCode = "en-us"
title = "Inclusive Pattern Docs"
baseURL = "/"
theme = "infusion"
[params]
description = "Documentation for the Inclusive Pattern Docs pattern library builder. This documentation is constructed using the builder itself."
codePenUser = "Heydon"
- title — This is the library’s name, like “Megacorp 5000 Pattern Library”. You don’t have to include the term “pattern library” if you don’t want to.
- theme — This is the theme the library is using. Don’t change this from “infusion”.
- description — This is a short description of the library and comes under the logo.
- codePenUser — If you want to embed codePens in your pattern files, you need to supply a codePen username here.
Including a logo
In the static
folder, you’ll find a logo.png
file. Replace this file with your own company or project logo. Currently, only the PNG format is supported.
Now that your logo’s in place, everything should be ready. Where next? You can learn about Library structure to help you get writing, or find out how to serve the library locally and on Github Pages in Serving .