pelican-themes is a command line tool for managing themes for Pelican.
-h, --help | Show the help an exit |
-l, --list | Show the themes already installed |
-i theme_path, --install theme_path | |
One or more themes to install | |
-r theme_name, --remove theme_name | |
One or more themes to remove | |
-s theme_path, --symlink theme_path | |
Same as “–install”, but create a symbolic link instead of copying the theme. Useful for theme development | |
-v, --verbose | Verbose output |
--version | Print the version of this script |
With pelican-themes, you can see the available themes by using the -l or --list option:
$ pelican-themes -l
notmyidea
two-column@
simple
$ pelican-themes --list
notmyidea
two-column@
simple
In this example, we can see there are three themes available: notmyidea, simple, and two-column.
two-column is prefixed with an @ because this theme is not copied to the Pelican theme path, but is instead just linked to it (see Creating symbolic links for details about creating symbolic links).
Note that you can combine the --list option with the -v or --verbose option to get more verbose output, like this:
$ pelican-themes -v -l
/usr/local/lib/python2.6/dist-packages/pelican-2.6.0-py2.6.egg/pelican/themes/notmyidea
/usr/local/lib/python2.6/dist-packages/pelican-2.6.0-py2.6.egg/pelican/themes/two-column (symbolic link to `/home/skami/Dev/Python/pelican-themes/two-column')
/usr/local/lib/python2.6/dist-packages/pelican-2.6.0-py2.6.egg/pelican/themes/simple
You can install one or more themes using the -i or --install option. This option takes as argument the path(s) of the theme(s) you want to install, and can be combined with the verbose option:
# pelican-themes --install ~/Dev/Python/pelican-themes/notmyidea-cms --verbose
# pelican-themes --install ~/Dev/Python/pelican-themes/notmyidea-cms\
~/Dev/Python/pelican-themes/martyalchin \
--verbose
# pelican-themes -vi ~/Dev/Python/pelican-themes/two-column
The pelican-themes command can also remove themes from the Pelican themes path. The -r or --remove option takes as argument the name(s) of the theme(s) you want to remove, and can be combined with the --verbose option.
# pelican-themes --remove two-column
# pelican-themes -r martyachin notmyidea-cmd -v
pelican-themes can also install themes by creating symbolic links instead of copying entire themes into the Pelican themes path.
To symbolically link a theme, you can use the -s or --symlink, which works exactly as the --install option:
# pelican-themes --symlink ~/Dev/Python/pelican-themes/two-column
In this example, the two-column theme is now symbolically linked to the Pelican themes path, so we can use it, but we can also modify it without having to reinstall it after each modification.
This is useful for theme development:
$ sudo pelican-themes -s ~/Dev/Python/pelican-themes/two-column
$ pelican ~/Blog/content -o /tmp/out -t two-column
$ firefox /tmp/out/index.html
$ vim ~/Dev/Pelican/pelican-themes/two-coumn/static/css/main.css
$ pelican ~/Blog/content -o /tmp/out -t two-column
$ cp /tmp/bg.png ~/Dev/Pelican/pelican-themes/two-coumn/static/img/bg.png
$ pelican ~/Blog/content -o /tmp/out -t two-column
$ vim ~/Dev/Pelican/pelican-themes/two-coumn/templates/index.html
$ pelican ~/Blog/content -o /tmp/out -t two-column
The --install, --remove and --symlink option are not mutually exclusive, so you can combine them in the same command line to do more than one operation at time, like this:
# pelican-themes --remove notmyidea-cms two-column \
--install ~/Dev/Python/pelican-themes/notmyidea-cms-fr \
--symlink ~/Dev/Python/pelican-themes/two-column \
--verbose
In this example, the theme notmyidea-cms is replaced by the theme notmyidea-cms-fr