diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 55bd237ca18d2511fc3bada40f5e34d05b07004b..b1923dd10c1e347e58c7bdd8939f16a71bc7648a 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ theme: my_theme You can now edit the theme's stylesheets and JavaScript to fit your needs. If you rather want to use a third-party theme, simply add the theme's directory to your `themes/` directory (e.g. `themes/some_other_theme/`) and update your `config/config.yml` accordingly. Pico's default theme is now completely disabled and won't ever interfere with your custom theme or your website in general anymore. If you want to use Pico's default theme again, either remove the line or replace it by `theme: default`. -Anyway, since Pico's default theme is meant to be a starting point for your own theme, it demonstrates how themes can allow one to tweak a theme's behavior. For this reason it supports a "Widescreen" mode: By adding `theme_config.widescreen: true` to your `config/config.yml`, the theme's main container grows from 768px to 1152px breadth due to adding `class="widescreen"` to the website's `<body>` element. Pico's default theme furthermore supports adding social buttons to its footer. Rather than using Pico's config for this, it uses the YAML Frontmatter of the `content/_meta.yml` Markdown file. Here's `content/_meta.yml` from Pico's sample contents: +Anyway, since Pico's default theme is meant to be a starting point for your own theme, it demonstrates how themes can allow one to tweak a theme's behavior. For this reason it supports a "Widescreen" mode: By adding `theme_config.widescreen: true` to your `config/config.yml`, the theme's main container grows from 768px to 1152px breadth due to adding `class="widescreen"` to the website's `<body>` element. Pico's default theme furthermore supports adding social buttons to its footer. Rather than using Pico's config for this, it uses the YAML Frontmatter of the `content/_meta.md` Markdown file. Here's `content/_meta.md` from Pico's sample contents: ```yaml ---