Twelvety is a pre-configured Eleventy starter project built to be fast. It includes:
- Component architecture
- CSS pipeline using Sass, PostCSS and CleanCSS
- JS pipeline using Browserify, Babel and Uglify
- Page-specific CSS and JS
- Inline critical CSS and defer non-critical CSS
- Minified HTML, CSS and JS
- Responsive picture shortcode with AVIF and WebP support
- Content-hash of assets
Write components like this:
<main class="home">
<h1 class="home__title">Twelvety</h1>
</main>
{% stylesheet 'scss' %}
@import "mixins";
.home {
@include container;
&__title {
color: red;
}
}
{% endstylesheet %}
{% javascript %}
console.log("Super fast 💨");
{% endjavascript %}
To quickly deploy your own instance of Twelvety to netlify, just click the button below and follow the instructions.
What will happen when I click this button? Netlify will clone the Twelvety git repository to your GitHub account (it will ask your permission to do this), add the new repository to your netlify account and deploy it!
Click the Use this template button at the top of this repository to make your own Twelvety repository in your GitHub account. Clone or download your new Twelvety repository onto your computer.
You'll need Node.js and npm (included with Node.js). To install the required packages, run
npm install
- Run
npm run serve
to run a development server and live-reload - Run
npm run build
to build for production - Run
npm run clean
to clean the output folder and Twelvety cache
The brains of Twelvety live in the utils
folder: if you just want to make a website, then you don't need to touch anything inside utils
. However, if you want to change any of the shortcodes, have a look around!
Twelvety sets up transforms, shortcodes and some sensible Eleventy options. Click the features below to learn how they work.
stylesheet
paired shortcode
Use the stylesheet
paired shortcode to include your Sass. You can import Sass files from your styles
directory (defined in .twelvety.js
) and from node_modules
. The Sass will be rendered using dart-sass, passed into PostCSS (with PostCSS Preset Env and Autoprefixer for compatibility) and either minified using clean-css or beautified by JS Beautifier (in production and development respectively).
{% stylesheet 'scss' %}
@import "normalize.css/normalize";
@import "mixins";
.home {
@include container;
color: $color--red;
}
{% endstylesheet %}
The second parameter of the stylesheet
paired shortcode is the language; currently, this does nothing and is included solely to align with Shopify's definition of the shortcode. If you want to use Sass indented syntax, you can change the indentedSass
Twelvety option, found in .twelvety.js
.
The stylesheet
paired shortcode also has a third parameter, which by default is set to page.url
, the URL of the current page being rendered. This means that only the required CSS is included in each page. You can make your own 'chunk' of CSS using this parameter, for example, a CSS file common to all pages of your website.
styles
shortcode
The styles
shortcode collects together all Sass written in stylesheet
paired shortcodes for the given chunk and outputs the rendered CSS. The 'chunk' defaults to page.url
, the URL of the current page being rendered.
<!-- Inline all styles on current page -->
<style>
{% styles page.url %}
</style>
<!-- Capture styles on current page -->
{% capture css %}
{% styles page.url %}
{% endcapture %}
<!-- And output asset using `asset` shortcode -->
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{% asset css, 'css' %}" />
Note that the styles
shortcode must be placed below any stylesheet
paired shortcodes in the template; see the append
paired shortcode and transform for more information.
javascript
paired shortcode
Include your JavaScript using the javascript
paired shortcode. Twelvety uses Browserify so that you can require('modules')
and Babel so you can use the latest JavaScript. Your JavaScript will then be minified using Uglify in production or beautified by JS Beautifier in development.
{% javascript %}
const axios = require("axios");
axios.get("/api/endpoint")
.then((response) => {
console.log("Yay, it worked!");
})
.catch((error) => {
console.log("Uh oh, something went wrong");
});
{% endjavascript %}
The javascript
paired shortcode has a second parameter, which by default is set to page.url
, the URL of the current page being rendered. This means that only the required JavaScript is included in each page. You can make your own 'chunk' of JavaScript using this parameter, for example, a JavaScript file for all vendor code.
The output of each javascript
paired shortcode will be wrapped in an IIFE so that your variables do not pollute global scope. If you want to define something on window
, use window.something =
.
script
shortcode
The script
shortcode collects together all the JavaScript for the given chunk and outputs the JavaScript (after transpilation and minification). The 'chunk' defaults to page.url
, the URL of the current page being rendered.
<!-- Inline all JavaScript on current page -->
<script>
{% script page.url %}
</script>
<!-- Capture JavaScript on current page -->
{% capture js -%}
{% script page.url %}
{%- endcapture -%}
<!-- And output asset using `asset` shortcode -->
<script src="{% asset js, 'js' %}" defer></script>
Note that the script
shortcode must be placed below any javascript
paired shortcodes in the template; usually this is not a problem as JavaScript is often included immediately preceding </body>
. If you want the JavaScript somewhere else, see the append
paired shortcode and transform.
asset
shortcode
The asset
shortcode outputs a content-hashed asset with the given content and extension. The content may be either a String
or Buffer
. Assets will be saved to the assets
directory inside the output
directory (both defined within .twelvety.js
).
<!-- Capture some content -->
{% capture css %}
h1 {
color: red;
}
{% endcapture %}
<!-- Save content to content-hashed file with .css extension -->
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{% asset css, 'css' %}" />
<!-- Output of shortcode -->
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/_assets/58f4b924.css" />
You can import the asset
shortcode function in JavaScript: this is how the picture
shortcode saves your responsive images into the assets
directory.
picture
shortcode
The picture
shortcode takes src
and alt
parameters and outputs a responsive picture element with AVIF* and WebP support. Your images must be stored within the images
directory, defined within .twelvety.js
. Twelvety will save the outputted images to the assets
directory inside the output
directory (both defined within .twelvety.js
). The picture
shortcode also takes two other parameters: sizes
which defaults to 90vw, (min-width: 1280px) 1152px
, based upon the breakpoint sizes; and loading
which defaults to lazy
, can also be eager
.
*AVIF is disabled by default due to long build times. You can enable it in .twelvety.js
.
<!-- Picture shortcode with src, alt, sizes and loading -->
{% picture 'car.jpg', 'Panning photo of grey coupe on road', '90vw', 'eager' %}
<!-- Absolute paths also work -->
{% picture '/src/_assets/images/car.jpg', 'Panning photo of grey coupe on road', '90vw', 'eager' %}
<!-- Output of shortcode -->
<picture style="background-color:rgb(38%,28%,26%);padding-bottom:50%">
<source srcset="/_assets/2263c1d0.avif 320w,/_assets/519fcdec.avif 640w,/_assets/b59349f7.avif 960w,/_assets/e8dae22f.avif 1280w,/_assets/4ba755ff.avif 1600w,/_assets/87c06dd1.avif 1920w" sizes="90vw" type="image/avif">
<source srcset="/_assets/0e7cdd2f.webp 320w,/_assets/ba4e43dd.webp 640w,/_assets/bc541ea5.webp 960w,/_assets/6d620165.webp 1280w,/_assets/756857ea.webp 1600w,/_assets/483e9c95.webp 1920w" sizes="90vw" type="image/webp">
<source srcset="/_assets/6a3b0321.jpeg 320w,/_assets/2bf90b83.jpeg 640w,/_assets/4a810813.jpeg 960w,/_assets/601b629c.jpeg 1280w,/_assets/c39ac58c.jpeg 1600w,/_assets/25a2b530.jpeg 1920w" sizes="90vw" type="image/jpeg">
<img src="/_assets/25a2b530.jpeg" alt="Panning photo of grey coupe on road" width="2400" height="1200" loading="lazy">
</picture>
The picture
shortcode uses native lazy-loading but it would be easy to add support for lazysizes
or a similar library if you wished. The picture
shortcode calculates the average colour of the image to show while the image loads, using padding-bottom
to avoid layout shift.
The picture
shortcode is automatically used for every image in Markdown. To disable this, you'll need to edit the instance of markdown-it (see Markdown feature).
<!-- Automatically uses picture shortcode -->
![Panning photo of grey coupe on road](car.jpg)
The images outputted by the picture
shortcode are cached. If you want to clear the cache, delete .twelvety.cache
(just a JSON file) or run npm run clean
to delete the cache and the output directory. If you delete the output directory but .twelvety.cache
, things will break.
append
paired shortcode and transform
Okay folks, here it is: the one gotcha with Twelvety. In order for the styles
shortcode to work, it must come after all stylesheet
paired shortcodes, which would usually be in the body
. However, we want our CSS to be linked or inlined in the head
. This is where the append
paired shortcode and transform come in, to move the output of the styles
shortcode back into the head
where we want it.
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<!-- Everything in append paired shortcode will be moved here -->
</head>
<body>
<!-- Stylesheet paired shortcodes can go here -->
...
<!-- Append paired shortcode with styles inside -->
{% append 'head' %}
<style>
{% styles page.url %}
</style>
{% endappend %}
</body>
</html>
The append
paired shortcode will actually be replaced with a template
. The append
transform then uses jsdom to append the contents of the template
to the given selector (in this case, head
).
The same problem exists for the script
shortcode, however, this is not such a problem because it's very common to include JavaScript from the bottom of body
anyway.
markdown
paired shortcode and configuration
Twelvety sets its own instance of markdown-it. The configuration options are:
{
html: true,
breaks: true,
typographer: true
}
Twelvety also modifies the image
rule of the renderer: instead of outputting an img
element, Twelvety uses the responsive picture
shortcode to render each image. If you want to disable this, remove the following lines in utils/markdown.js
.
md.renderer.rules.image = function (tokens, index) {
const token = tokens[index];
const src = token.attrs[token.attrIndex("src")][1];
const alt = token.content;
return pictureShortcode(src, alt);
};
Twelvety also adds a markdown
paired shortcode which uses the markdown-it configuration.
{% markdown %}
# `markdown` paired shortcode
Lets you use **Markdown** like _this_.
{% endmarkdown %}
This is also really useful for including Markdown files into a template.
{% markdown %}
{%- include 'content.md' -%}
{% endmarkdown %}
Be careful of the common pitfall of indented code blocks when using the markdown
paired shortcode. If indented code blocks are becoming a nuisance, you can disable them in utils/markdown.js
whilst retaining fenced code blocks.
// Uncomment the following line to disable indented code blocks
- // .disable("code")
+ .disable("code")
critical
transform
Instead of using a transform, Twelvety now uses eleventy-critical-css to extract and inline critical-path CSS on every page.
format
transform
The format
transform beautifies HTML in development using JS Beautifier and minifies HTML in production using HTMLMinifier. Any inline CSS and JavaScript will also be beautified or minified.
If you're using Visual Studio Code I recommend this Liquid extension so that your Sass and JavaScript will be highlighted correctly.