# Required: Should NOT end in trailing slash. scheme/host = http://lexi-lambda.github.io # The title of the blog. Used when generating feeds. title = Alexis King's Blog # The author. Used when generating feeds, and provided to # `page-template.html` as the template variable `@author`. author = Alexis King # What editor to launch with --edit. $EDITOR means to use $EDITOR from # the environment editor = $EDITOR # The command to run, in case you need to customize how the editor is # called. For example, {editor} {filename} will call: # (system "$EDITOR 2012-01-01-a-blog-post.md") # See the test submodule in paths.rkt for more examples editor-command = {editor} {filename} # Whether to show the count of posts next to each tag in the # `page-template` variable `tags/feeds`. show-tag-counts? = true # Pattern for blog post permalinks # Optional: Default is "/{year}/{month}/{title}.html". # Here's an example of the Jekyll "pretty" style: permalink = /blog/{year}/{month}/{day}/{title}/index.html # There is also {filename}, which is the `this-part` portion of # your post's YYYY-MM-DD-this-part.md file name. This is in case # you don't like Frog's encoding of your post title and want to # specify it exactly yourself, e.g. to match a previous blog URI. # Should index page items contain full posts -- more than just the # portion above "the jump" marker (if any)? index-full? = false # Should feed items contain full posts -- more than just the portion # above "the jump" marker (if any)? feed-full? = true # How many posts per page for index pages? posts-per-page = 10 # How many items to include in feeds? # Older items in excess of this will not appear in the feed at all. max-feed-items = 20 # Decorate feed URIs with Google Analytics query parameters like # utm_source ? decorate-feed-uris? = true # Insert in each feed item an image bug whose URI is decorated with # Google Analytics query parameters like utm_source ? feed-image-bugs? = true # Replace links to tweets with embedded tweets? # In Markdown, must be auto-links alone in a pargraph (blank lines # above and below), for example: # # # auto-embed-tweets? = true # Try to automatically link symbols in Markdown ```racket fenced code # blocks, to Racket documentation? racket-doc-link-code? = true # Try to automatically link Markdown of the form `symbol`[racket] to # Racket documentation? i.e. This is similar to the @racket[] form in # Scribble. racket-doc-link-prose? = true # The URI for the index of blog posts. Defaults to /index.html but you # could change to e.g. /blog/index.html or /posts-index.html, and use # some other /index.html for your site. This also effects the URI used # in the Atom and RSS feed files for posts. posts-index-uri = /index.html # The source directory. Defaults to "_src". # # If you deploy to GitHub pages then it is simplest to keep this under # the repo/project top directory. # # This may be an absolute or relative path. If relative, it's relative # to the project top directory, i.e. to where this .frogrc file is # located. source-dir = _src # The output directory where generated HTML and other files should go. # # If you deploy to e.g. GitHub pages then it is simplest to put the # output in the repo/project top directory, which is why this defaults # to ".". But you may change it if you prefer to copy the output # files to their final destination. # # This may be an absolute or relative path. If relative, it's relative # to the project top directory, i.e. to where this .frogrc file is # located. output-dir = out # Options controlling Pygments' HTML format. ## Python executable to be passed to the shell. If only a filename or ## relative path is given, Racket's find-executable-path will be used ## to locate the executable. python-executable = python ## Whether to use line numbers. pygments-linenos? = true ## CSS class for the wrapping
tag (default: 'highlight'). pygments-cssclass = source