You can use the editor on GitHub to maintain and preview the content for your website in Markdown files.
Whenever you commit to this repository, GitHub Pages will run Jekyll to rebuild the pages in your site, from the content in your Markdown files.
Markdown is a lightweight and easy-to-use syntax for styling your writing. It includes conventions for
Syntax highlighted code block
# Header 1
## Header 2
### Header 3
- Bulleted
- List
1. Numbered
2. List
**Bold** and _Italic_ and `Code` text
[Link](url) and ![Image](src)
For more details see GitHub Flavored Markdown.
Your Pages site will use the layout and styles from the Jekyll theme you have selected in your repository settings. The name of this theme is saved in the Jekyll _config.yml
configuration file.
Having trouble with Pages? Check out our documentation or contact support and we’ll help you sort it out.
This framework provides a Jekyll project that is organized and optimized for Webdev team. This includes:
- An organized architecture.
- A workflow to build and serve single page applications.
- User management system.
- Base stylesheet with Twitter Bootstrap.
- The scripts to initialize and update(not yet) baseline site.
If you are starting your project from scratch, simply clone or copy this baseline projects files.
- Go to a project you would like to update.
- Run "git remote add baseline https://github.com/oicr-webdev/webdev_static-cms-baseline"
- Run "git fetch baseline"
- Run "git merge --alow-unrelated-histories baseline/master" (Only for the first time)
- Solve merge conflicts
Please check our webdev documentation for further information about static-cms-baseline.