6.4 KiB
👔 Portfolio thingy, built with Gatsby.
Table of Contents
Features
The whole portfolio is a React-based Single Page App built with Gatsby v2.
One data file to rule all pages
All content is powered by one YAML file, data/projects.yml
where all the portfolio's projects are defined. The project description itself is transformed from Markdown.
Gatsby automatically creates pages from each item in that file utilizing the src/templates/Project.jsx
template.
Theme switcher
Includes a theme switcher which allows user to toggle between a light and a dark theme. Switching between them also happens automatically based on time of day.
If you want to know how, have a look at the respective component under src/components/molecules/ThemeSwitch.jsx
SEO component
Includes a SEO component which automatically switches all required meta
tags for search engines, Twitter Cards, and Facebook OpenGraph tags based on the browsed route/page.
If you want to know how, have a look at the respective component under src/components/atoms/SEO.jsx
Client-side vCard creation
The Add to addressbook link in the footer automatically creates a downloadable vCard file on the client-side, based on data defined in data/meta.yml
.
If you want to know how, have a look at the respective component under src/components/atoms/Vcard.jsx
Matomo (formerly Piwik) analytics tracking
Site sends usage statistics to my own Matomo installation. To make this work in Gatsby, I created and open sourced a plugin, gatsby-plugin-matomo, which is in use on this site.
Project images
All project images live under src/images
and are automatically attached to each project based on the inclusion of the project's slug
in their filenames.
All project images make use of the excellent gatsby-image plugin, working in tandem with gatsby-plugin-sharp and gatsby-transformer-sharp.
All together, Gatsby automatically generates all required image sizes for delivering responsible, responsive images to visitors, including lazy loading of all images. Also includes the intersection-observer polyfill to make lazy loading work properly in Safari.
All project images use one single component defined in src/components/atoms/ProjectImage.jsx
. In there, one main GraphQL query fragment is defined, which then gets used throughout other GraphQL queries.
Importing SVG assets
All SVG assets under src/images/
will be converted to React components before every build. Makes use of SVGR
so SVG assets can be imported like so:
import Logo from './components/svg/Logo'
That's done with a simple bash script under src/scripts/svg.sh
Typekit component
Includes a component for adding the Typekit snippet.
If you want to know how, have a look at the respective component under src/components/atoms/Typekit.jsx
Development
git clone git@github.com:kremalicious/portfolio.git
cd portfolio/
npm i
npm start
Linting
ESlint, Prettier, and Stylelint are setup for all linting purposes:
npm run lint
To automatically format all code files:
npm run format
npm run format:css
Add a new project
To add a new project, run the following command. This adds a new item to the top of the projects.yml
file, creating the title & slug from the argument:
npm run new -- "Hello"
Then continue modifying the new entry in data/projects.yml
.
Finally, add as many images as needed with the file name format and put into src/images/
:
portfolio-SLUG-01.png
portfolio-SLUG-02.png
portfolio-SLUG-03.png
...
Deployment
Automatic deployments are triggered upon successful tests & builds on Travis:
- push to
master
initiates a live deployment - any Pull Request, and subsequent pushes to it, initiates a beta deployment
The deploy command simply calls the scripts/deploy.sh
script, syncing the contents of the public/
folder to S3:
npm run deploy
The deploymeng script can be used locally too, the branch checks are only happening for Travis builds, allowing to deploy any branch from local machine.
Licenses
All images and projects are plain ol' copyright:
© Copyright 2018 Matthias Kretschmann
Most displayed projects are subject to the copyright of their respective owners.
All the rest, like all code and documentation, is under:
The MIT License