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How To: Create a blog template

A blog is an appropriate way to present information about formal and informal events or extraordinary experiences.

In this guide you will learn how to:

  • Define blog layout and elements
  • Integration in your existing application

Conceptual page and content structuring

Imagine you like to have a simple blog template on your website. First of all as mentioned in about AlchemyCMS you should identify required components in your blog layout. Common components are a headline, a blog post itself and sidebar blocks for category overview and featured posts.

Following the steps you will create blog template according to Foundation Zurb. (© ZURB, Inc)

We will build this template using the Blog sample

Concept and structure

Visit the Blog sample page and have a deep look at the layout.

Let us start to divide the template. We can identify the following page elements:

  • blog post (multiple) contains title, date, author, image and text
  • categories block contains list of categories
  • featured block contains text block with link to favorite blog post

Prerequisites

At the beginning some preparation is required. First of all, follow these instruction provided by Zurb to Add Foundation to your Rails app.

Hence the necessary preparations are completed.

Define elements

First of all we define the elements we need in config/alchemy/elements.yml. The individual page elements (see Concept and structure) could be considered as an element.

Blog title

The blog should have a unique title. The title element contains a title and a text which represents a description or motto. In both cases we choose an Text, due to the fact that the title and the text will contain simple text.

The default attribute provides the preset value, if the user didn't specify a motto or description (in Alchemy's backend).

yaml
- name: blog_title
  unique: true
  ingredients:
    - role: title
      type: Text
      default: Blog
    - role: text
      type: Text
      default: This is my blog. It's awesome.

Blog post

A blog_post element has a title, date, author, image and text.

The title is represented by blog_post_title. It's just a text, so we took Text as type. Below settings we use linkable: true, because the user should be able to choose a link for the title of the blog post.

The meta data like author and creation date corresponds to blog_post_meta.

The blog_post_intro_text text as well as the main content blog_post_content get the type Richtext, since the user likes to add multiline paragraphs.

The blog_post_image is of type Picture. This will empower the user to add an image.

yaml
- name: blog_post
  ingredients:
    - role: blog_post_title
      type: Text
      default: Blog Post Title
      settings:
        linkable: true
    - role: blog_post_meta
      type: Text
      default: "Written by John Smith on August 12, 2012"
    - role: blog_post_intro_text
      type: Richtext
    - role: blog_post_image
      type: Picture
    - role: blog_post_content
      type: Richtext

Categories Block

The 'categories block' has a headline and a list of available categories.

The categories_headline is represented by an Text. In the backend the user should be able to add categories easily and dynamically. That's the reason why we chose the nestable_elements feature.

yaml
- name: categories_block
  ingredients:
    - role: categories_headline
      type: Text
      default: Categories
      nestable_elements:
        - category

- name: category
  ingredients:
    - role: name
      type: Text
      settings:
        linkable: true

The 'featured block' with a headline, text and a link.

yaml
- name: featured
  unique: true
  ingredients:
    - role: featured_headline
      type: Text
      default: "Featured"
    - role: featured_text
      type: Richtext
    - role: featured_link
      type: Text
      settings:
        linkable: true

TIP

Instead of Text you could alternatively use Link for 'featured_link'.

Define blog page layout

After the definition of the elements, you we will continue with the defintion of an appropriate page layout. Page layout are specified in config/alchemy/page_layouts.yml.

Add a new page layout for your blog template:

yaml
- name: blog
  elements:
    - blog_title
    - blog_post
    - categories_block
    - featured
  autogenerate:
    - blog_title

The autogenerate attribute allows to define elements which will be generated automatically, when the user creates a new page in backend.

Generate and customize the partials

The command

bash
rails g alchemy:elements --skip

creates the partials according to the element definition in the elements.yml.

The partials are stored in app/views/alchemy/elements/.

e.g. the partial for 'blog_post' element: _blog_post.html.erb

Customize the partials

In order to adapt the output of the elements you have to change the partial. The command above generates default partials. The _blog_post.html.erb might look like this:

erb
<% cache(blog_post) do %>
  <%= element_view_for(blog_post) do |el| %>
    <div class="blog_post_title">
      <%= el.render :blog_post_title %>
    </div>
    <div class="blog_post_meta">
      <%= el.render :blog_post_meta %>
    </div>
    <div class="blog_post_intro_text">
      <%= el.render :blog_post_intro_text %>
    </div>
    <div class="blog_post_image">
      <%= el.render :blog_post_image %>
    </div>
    <div class="blog_post_content">
      <%= el.render :blog_post_content %>
    </div>
  <% end %>
<% end %>

_blog_post_.html.erb

The blog post should match with the layout of the blog page in general, therefore we edit the partial:

erb
<% cache(blog_post) do %>
  <%= element_view_for(blog_post) do |el| %>
    <article>
      <h3><%= el.render :blog_post_title %></h3>
      <h6><%= el.render :blog_post_meta %></h6>
      <div class="row">
        <div class="large-6 columns">
          <%= el.render :blog_post_intro_text %>
        </div>
        <div class="large-6 columns">
          <%= el.render :blog_post_image %>
        </div>
      </div>
      <%= el.render :blog_post_content %>
    </article>
    <hr/>
  <% end %>
<% end %>

For the remaining elements replace the content of the correspondig partials with the following code snippets:

_blog_title.html.erb

erb
<% cache(blog_title) do %>
  <%= element_view_for(blog_title, tag: 'h1') do |el| %>
    <%= el.render :title %>
    <small><%= el.render :text %></small>
  <% end %>
<% end %>

_categories_block.html.erb

erb
<% cache(categories_block) do %>
  <%= element_view_for(categories_block) do |el| %>
    <h5><%= el.render :categories_headline %></h5>
    <%= render categories_block.nested_elements %>
  <% end %>
<% end %>

_category.html.erb

erb
<% cache(category) do %>
  <%= element_view_for(category, tag: 'p') do |el| %>
    <%= el.render :name %>
  <% end %>
<% end %>
erb
<% cache(featured) do %>
  <%= element_view_for(featured) do |el| %>
    <h5><%= el.render :featured_headline %></h5>
    <%= el.render :featured_text %>
    <p><%= el.render :featured_link %></p>
  <% end %>
<% end %>

Embed the elements into your page layout

Finally you have to integrate your elements into the page layout.

Create new page layout view

Create a new file called _blog.html.erb in app/views/alchemy/page_layouts and copy the plain html code from Foundation Zurb Blog Template Raw.

Edit blog page layout view

In app/views/alchemy/page_layouts/_blog.html search for (inside 'Nav Bar' comment)

erb
<h1>
  Blog <small>This is my blog. It's awesome.</small>
</h1>

and replace with:

erb
<%= render_elements only: 'blog_title' %>

The blog_title set in the backend is now visible in the blog page layout context.

Inside the commented 'Main Blog Content' replace the whole content of <div class="large-9 columns" role="content"> with

erb
<%= render_elements only: 'blog_post' %>

to embed the blog_post elements into the page layout view.

Inside 'Sidebar' comment replace

erb
<h5>Categories</h5>

<ul class="side-nav">
  <li>
    <a href="#">News</a>
  </li>
  <li>
    <a href="#">Code</a>
  </li>
  <li>
    <a href="#">Design</a>
  </li>
  <li>
    <a href="#">Fun</a>
  </li>
  <li>
    <a href="#">Weasels</a>
  </li>
</ul>

with

erb
<%= render_elements only: 'categories_block' %>

and replace the content of <div class="panel"> with

erb
<%= render_elements only: 'featured' %>

Now you can run

bash
rails server

to start the server.

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