Maxence-L / notenote.link

A Jekyll digital garden template, optimized for integration with Obsidian. It aims to enhance discoverability and help you build a personal knowledge base that can scale with time.
https://notenote.link
MIT License
161 stars 90 forks source link

Applying another theme #6

Closed one-data-cookie closed 3 years ago

one-data-cookie commented 3 years ago

Stunning work, @Maxence-L! 👏

I'd like to get this up and running, ideally using Hyde. Can you recommend which parts would be necessary to change to get at least a very similar feel, i.e. fixed left sidebar, same colour scheme, and fonts?

Or do you reckon it might be feasible to make this a subpage of a main website built with another theme (like Hyde)?

In the readme, you mention that you're thinking about having the ability to apply different themes. So, maybe this is already on your mind?

Any help would be much appreciated.

Maxence-L commented 3 years ago

Hi, thanks !

I set up Hyde to see if it was compatible with the content.html file which runs the house. Its skeleton is clearly different from notenote.link, which complicates the automatic retrieval of link addresses in [[wikilinks]].

Given that the content.html is already very hacky, I'd go the CSS route and modify notenote.link to get the same feel. My 2cts on what could be changed safely :

Do not hesitate to fork the repo and ask questions if you feel stuck.

Currently, my aim is to increase the compatibility of notenote.link with Obsidian so that it works seamlessly for my every day note-making (see last update in the README). I'm a data scientist, not a web dev, so I'm desperately slow at css styling 😅

one-data-cookie commented 3 years ago

Thank you for looking into this and providing me with directions, @Maxence-L. I took the suggested route and – after some pain with CSS – made it work. Just about to fill it with my content any day now!

Cheers and thanks again. 👍