Aniruddha Tekade

Distributed Systems and AI Engineer

Welcome to Simply Grey

22 Dec 2013 » jekyll

SimplyGrey is a simple, easy to use theme for Jekyll that compromises of mainly grey colours. A lot of people enjoy the simplistic look of grey and also find it easier to read.

Why use Simply Grey?

There are lots of reasons why I think you should use Simply Grey but I will list the main ones that I believe are more of benefit to you, the user.

  • Easy to use and setup - Jekyll has a huge range of documentation to get you started writing posts and the Simply Grey theme makes your blog look beautiful.
  • Easy configuration - I developed this theme in order to be as customisable as possible. If you want to add more links to the navigation bar, all you have to do is edit the _config.yaml file and the urls part of it.
  • You can change it - After being released with the MIT license (like Jekyll itself) you are free to change and basically do anything you want to this theme provided you keep the copyright notice in the files and distribute the license with it.

Jekyll

Jekyll is a static site generator developed in ruby that generates websites from markdown and many other formats. The benefit of this is that you can have a highly customisable blog where you can generate posts by writing easy markdown code whilst still retaining the small memory imprint that Jekyll has.

Code Snippets

Code Snippets are one of the main reasons why I love Jekyll and I think you will too. All code snippets become highlighted with great colours when you write the code in markdown. Here is an example of highlighted Ruby code in a weather application that I have made.

#!/usr/bin/env ruby

require 'json'
require 'net/http'
require 'libnotify'

def parsejson
    file = "http://api.openweathermap.org/data/2.5/find?q=London&mode=json"
    response = Net::HTTP.get_response(URI.parse(file))
    weatherjson = response.body
    actual = JSON.parse(weatherjson)

    # check for errors
    if actual.has_key? 'Error'
        raise "error with the url"
    end

    results = []

    actual["list"].each do |listitem|
        weather = listitem["weather"]
        weather.each do |weath|
            results.push(weath["description"])
        end
        main = listitem["main"]
        temp = main["temp"] - 273.15
        results.push ("%.2f" % temp)
    end

    return results
end

def notify(summary)
    Libnotify.show(:body => "Current temperature is: #{summary[1]} degrees celsius.\nCurrent description of conditions: #{summary[0]}", :summary => "Weather Update", :timeout => 10)
end

notify(parsejson())

Check out the Jekyll docs for more info on how to get the most out of Jekyll. File all bugs/feature requests at Jekyll’s GitHub repo.

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