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Themes
As of february 2018 Medusa utilizes a new frontend build architecture. This enables us to utilize multiple atomic themes. As long as each theme follows a specific structure, it can be used in medusa and users could add their own. In this document we'll explain how to:
- make changes to existing themes;
- describe the theme's build architecture.
If your starting with a fresh checkout of Medusa. You will see that there is a default-themes
directory and themes
directory. themes-default
is the source and themes
is the distributable.
At time of writing Medusa ships with two main themes. slim
and legacy
. slim
is the theme that has been made es6 ready. And this theme should be used with modern browsers like Chrome, Firefox and webkit compatible.
legacy
is an IE11 compatible browser, which should not be touched anymore. For the rest of this document we'll assume your going to work on slim
.
You should navigate to the following directory: ./themes-default/slim/
.
By running the following command, you will make sure you have installed all the npm modules, required for building and testing the theme.
npm install -g yarn // If you have not yet installed yarn.
yarn // To install all dependencies and start the lint.
At this time you'll have to choose a sub-theme which your are going to export to. The source is the same except for the dark.css or light.css stylesheets. Using the sub-theme dark
will build all files into: themes/dark/*
and light
into themes/light/*
.
Run the following command:
gulp watch --csstheme dark
This will start the following:
- Copy all css files from ./static/css -> themes/dark/assets/css
- Copy all js files from ./static/js -> themes/dark/assets/js
- Copy all fonts from ./static/fonts -> themes/dark/assets/fonts
- Copy all images from ./static/images -> themes/dark/img
- Copy all mako templates from ./views -> themes/templates
- Copy all vue files from ./vue -> themes/vue
- Copy package.json and index.html from ./ -> themes/
With these actions other actions are also performed, like minimizing js, adding source maps, and compress images.
After all tasks have been finished, you'll end up with a build theme, and a watcher has been started. This will watch all source files and compare them to it's source. Whenever it detects a change, it will only run the build task that is configured to run with those watched files. For changes to mako templates you'll need to restart medusa. Others should become directly visible.
from ./themes-default/slim
- dark:
gulp build --csstheme dark
- light:
gulp build --csstheme light
from ./themes-default/legacy
- legacy:
gulp build --csstheme dark
This will result in the following directory structure:
├── themes
├── dark
├── light
└── legacy
distributable:
themes/[theme name]
├── assets
│ ├── css
│ │ └── main.css
│ ├── img
│ │ └── logo.png
│ └── js
│ └── index.js
|── package.json
|── templates
│ └─ index.mako
|── vue
│ ├── build.js
│ ├── build.js.map
│ ├── build.min.js
│ └── build.min.map
└─ index.html (SPA)
source:
themes_default/[theme name]
├── static
│ ├── css
│ │ └── main.css
│ ├── img
│ │ └── logo.png
│ └── fonts
│ └── js
│ └── index.js
├── package.json
└── views
│ └─ index.mako
└── vue
├── src
├── test
├── locales
├── .babelrc
├── index.html
└── package.json
At Medusa startup medusa reads the ./themes/ folder for all available themes, by moving through the folders and reading the package.json. This is the configuration file for each theme. As a minimum it will require the following attributes:
- name
- version