| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Lines |
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Instead of using boolean arguments to control the article class (and
which parts of the article are rendered), accept a class string that is
used directly. For now, check for the right class before rendering a
title - an upcoming commit will change this to be cleaner.
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We can get rid of the post title in the banner since the base template
now renders it in the main banner whenever we show a single post.
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This is the first in a series of commits that will attempt to clean up
and simplify the templates, most of which were put together hastily.
One particular egregious example of this is how Tera blocks are employed
to set per-page titles, provide banner descriptions and links, and
include additional RSS feeds. These elements are all outside the normal
'content' block provided by the base template. Almost always they
contain only one line of text.
This solution was chosen because there did not seem to be a cleaner way
of having per-page variables in the base template. This is a problem
especially for the 'single' and list' taxonomy pages which do not even
have front matter (and therefore cannot carry additional metadata).
Furthermore, we want to keep each page's front matter as minimal as
possible and avoid hard-coding a post description of "post № <X>".
Instead rely on the fact that each type of page is identifiable in the
base template by the variables that are set in it. The index carries the
'section' variable, pages carry 'page', a single taxonomy term carries
'term', and a single taxonomy carries 'terms'.
Using this information we can consolidate all these blocks into the base
template in a simple and clean way.
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Post titles are currently only visible in the feed, or on the post page
itself. Since people may remember posts by their titles rather than
their number, display the titles on each post's banner as well for
easier searching. This means we can now get rid of the extra item in the
post page's description.
A neat side effect is that we now have a header element for each
<article>, making W3C a bit happier.
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