Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
executable file
·
307 lines (189 loc) · 15.1 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

executable file
·
307 lines (189 loc) · 15.1 KB

Jamstack Compatible 11ty Boilerplate

Nunjucks + SCSS + Tailwind CSS + ESNext starter based on 11ty and Gulp ✨

Netlify demo page with examples and additional bits of documentation and examples

https://frontenso-11ty-starter.netlify.app/

Table of Contents

Features

This starter kit is built on a component-based structure, utilizing the power of Nunjucks, SCSS, and Tailwind CSS, Webpack, ESNext, and live reloading. Modern image formats out of the box (AVIF, WebP) and image optimization.

It uses 11ty to handle HTML generation and Gulp for the rest of the build process.

Core features:

  • Component-based approach.
  • Fast builds with Gulp, SCSS, Tailwind CSS, and PostCSS support.
  • Modern image formats out of the box (AVIF, WebP) and image optimization.
  • No JS-framework dependencies (you can add preact or any other framework though).
  • Live reloading.
  • Linters included.
  • System notifications for build errors.
  • Webpack config for most cases.
  • SVG sprite generation and optimization.
  • Environment variables support via .env files.
  • HTML minification for production builds.
  • Flexible static path configuration.
  • (Optional) Tailwind CSS with JIT.
  • (Optional) TypeScript support using JSDoc notation.

It is flexible and can be used in conjunction with any data source, whether it be a headless CMS, JSON, Markdown or any other data source that can be fetched via JavaScript. For more information on how to work with data sources, please refer to the 11ty documentation.

Getting started

Using this repository as a template

This repository can be a perfect starting point for your next project. By simply clicking on the green "Use this template" button on this GitHub page, you can easily create a new repository. After creating a new repository you can customize and configure it to your liking and begin your development journey with ease.

Running for development

1. Install dependencies:

npm install

2. Run the project for development:

npm start

3. Open development URL - http://localhost:9000/.

Build the project for production environment:

npm run build

Creating a zip-archive build.zip:

npm run zip

This command uses npm run build to build the project and then creates a zip-archive build.zip in the root folder of the project.

Component-based Approach

Decomposing the UI into separate, less coupled components is highly recommended for many reasons.

It is a best practice to create components for parts of the UI that appear in multiple places in your project, such as buttons, common page sections, widgets, and sliders.

To keep your components organized, it is a good idea to keep them inside the src/components/ folder. This starter kit allows you to keep the markup, styles, and JavaScript code for a component all in one place, making it easy to use them in multiple locations throughout your project. Take a look at the src/components/ folder for examples of how different types of components are arranged. It's important to note that it is not always necessary to include Nunjucks or JavaScript code for a component if it does not make sense to do so, for example, when the markup is quite simple or when a component does not have any JavaScript logic.

Modern Image Formats

This starter uses @11ty/eleventy-img to generate modern image formats (AVIF, WebP) and optimize images. See examples on the demo page.

Image Quality Settings

You can change image compression settings for avif, webp, jpeg files in .eleventy.js config.

Png are compressed with pngquant as it provides the best compression. You can change png compression settings in optimize-png.js config.

TypeScript (optional)

This boilerplate has built-in support for TypeScript, but it is completely optional to use it during development. We have chosen to use JSDoc notation (which is officially supported by TypeScript team) to provide TypeScript support. This means that you don't have to write your code using TypeScript syntax, and can instead continue to write your code using JavaScript syntax with JSDoc notation for TypeScript support. This approach also allows you to easily disable TypeScript if you do not need it at some point during your development process, for example, to speed up development or if you have new developers working on the project who are not familiar with TypeScript.

If you don't need TypeScript

Simply remove tsconfig.json file from your project.

Tailwind CSS (optional)

This starter kit comes with Tailwind CSS support out of the box. Tailwind CSS is a utility-first CSS framework that allows you to quickly build custom user interfaces. For more information on how to use Tailwind CSS, please refer to the Tailwind CSS documentation.

If you don't need Tailwind CSS

Simply remove the following line:

<link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ STATIC_PATH }}/css/tailwind.css" />

from src/_layouts/base.njk file.

You can also remove tailwindcss section from postcss.config.js and remove tailwind gulp task from gulpfile.js, but it is optional.

Nunjucks HTML template engine

Nunjucks is a powerful HTML template engine with a syntax very similar to jinja2. Nunjucks makes easier writing highly-maintainable HTML code.

Nunjucks templates seat in src/_layouts/, src/components/ folders.

To make the most out of Nunjucks, it is recommended to read through its documentation. This will give you a good understanding of its features and how to use them effectively in your project.

You can also read 11ty documentation on templating and data sources.

Another tip for working with Nunjucks is to ensure that your code editor has syntax highlighting for Nunjucks. If your editor does not have native support for Nunjucks, you can set up the syntax highlighting for the Twig template engine instead. This can be done by configuring your editor to use the Twig syntax highlighting when opening .njk files.

Using a different template engine

11ty has support for many template engines. If you prefer to use a different template engine, you can easily do so.

To do this, you need to replace Nunjucks with your desired template engine in the .eleventy.js file. You can find information on how to configure a different template engine in the 11ty documentation.

Webpack v5

This starter kit uses Webpack v5 to build the JavaScript bundle. However, it does not have hot reloading feature enabled, as it is not necessary for static websites.

Customize static path

This template provides the ability to customize the static path for project resources such as images, scripts, styles, etc. For example, you can use a custom CDN URL. Add an .env file to the root directory of the project with the following content STATIC_PATH=http://localhost:9000 then you can reference the STATIC_PATH variable in your code like this <link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ STATIC_PATH }}/css/tailwind.css">

Note: When using STATIC_PATH in Nunjucks macros, it must be passed as props.

.env file and environment variables

Environment variables in JS code

This starter kit uses the dotenv package to load environment variables from a .env file. You can add environment variables to the .env file and use them in your code. Additionally, don't forget to include the new variable in the webpack configuration under the EnvironmentPlugin settings. After restarting the project, you will be able to reference the variable within your code like this: process.env.MY_VARIABLE.

Environment variables in Nunjucks templates

If you need to use environment variables in Nunjucks templates, you can add JS files for the variables in src/_data/ folder and then reference them in Nunjucks templates like this: {{ MY_VARIABLE }}. As an example, see the src/_data/STATIC_PATH.js file.

The SVG sprite

This starter features a convenient way to include SVG files through the use of SVG sprites. By utilizing the gulp-svgstore plugin, it generates a single sprite containing all of your SVG files.

The SVG sprite markup is inlined in base.njk template using {% svg_prite %} shortcode function (there is no need to modify this code).

To show an SVG image on the webpage, first place it in the src/svg folder. For example, if the file is named some-vector.svg.

Then add it to the page in the following way:

<svg><use xlink:href="#icon-some-vector"></use></svg>

Note: some-vector.svg file should be located in the src/svg directory so that gulp-svgstore could add it to the SVG sprite.

You can also use CSS selectors to set properties such as the fill or stroke for this element on the page, without having to edit the SVG file. Additionally, you can even animate specific parts of the SVG element, such as a <path> or <circle>.

You can also take a look at the <svg> examples in the index.njk.

{% image %} Nunjucks tag

This feature allows you to easily create AVIF and WebP images. It automatically generates multiple sizes for the srcset attribute based on the maximum width specified (the third argument) and the widths defined in the .eleventy.js configuration file.

If you need to add CSS class to <picture> tag then pass it as pictureClass among the options (second argument). To add CSS class to <img> pass class to options argument.

See examples in index.njk to get familiar with {% image %} tag.

Inlining images as base64 strings inside Nunjucks templates using inline filter

This may become a useful approach if you need to display an image instantly on the page without making a request to the server.

<img src="{{ 'src/images/some-image.png' | inline }}" alt="" />

Warning! Please use this feature with caution as it may bloat the final HTML file. Inlining images could be a good approach if the file is quite small, in other cases prefer {% image %} tag.

Inlining raster or svg images in CSS

The postcss-assets plugin allows to inline images into CSS code in Base64 encoding or as is for SVG files:

background: inline('some-image.png')

The plugin also can insert an image sizes:

width: width('some-image.png')
height: height('some-image.png')
background-size: size('some-image.png')

Warning! Use this feature with caution as it may cause the final CSS file to become large. Inlining images is a good option if the file is relatively small, otherwise, it is recommended to use the {% image %} tag instead.

Enabling system notifications for errors (node-notifier)

We use node-notifier to display system notifications for Eleventy errors. If you want to see these notifications in your operating system, make sure to enable notifications for your terminal application:

macOS: Go to System Settings (or System Preferences) → Notifications & Focus → Find your terminal application (e.g. Terminal, iTerm, VS Code integrated terminal), then enable Allow Notifications.

Windows: Open Settings → System → Notifications & actions and ensure notifications are allowed for your chosen terminal or shell app.

Linux: This can depend on your distribution and notification daemon. In GNOME-based distros, open Settings → Notifications; in others, consult your system’s notification settings.

Once notifications are enabled, any error messages sent via node-notifier will pop up on your system. If you don't see them, double-check that you granted permission to the correct application.

Prettier configuration

This starter kit uses Prettier to format the code. The configuration is located in the .prettierrc file. For .njk files, it uses the jinja-template parser.

HTML minification

HTML minification is handled during the production build process via the beautify-html script in package.json. It uses html-minifier with the following default settings:

  • Collapses whitespace
  • Removes comments
  • Removes optional tags
  • Removes redundant attributes
  • Removes script type attributes
  • Removes tag whitespace
  • Uses short doctype
  • Minifies CSS and JavaScript within HTML

The full command is:

npm run beautify-html

Disabling HTML minification

If you need to disable HTML minification for any reason, you can:

  1. Remove the beautify-html step from the build script in package.json. Change:

Examples

For code examples, please refer to src/index.njk.

To see them live, open the index page in the browser by running npm start and going to http://localhost:9000

You can also check them on the live demo page

Useful links

Nunjucks syntax

11ty Image plugin

11ty Documentation

Gulp Documentation

SCSS Documentation

Tailwind CSS

Tailwind CSS Cheatsheet