Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Mar 8, 2021. It is now read-only.
/ wp-get-go Public archive

A molecular framework and node app for rapid WordPress theme bootstrapping & development

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

Yapapaya/wp-get-go

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

38 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

wp-get-go

wp-get-go (get-go = get going) is a framework for bootstrapping WordPress theme development.

Command

wpgg [--no-validate --no-autofix --no-push --no-css [--silly | --verbose | --debug]]

Arguments

  1. --no-validate Don't validate the git repositories (if you know they are fine, this can speed up build.
  2. --no-autofix wpgg can fix and update a lot of errors in the package and build information. Using this argument will prevent that and throw errors instead.
  3. --no-push Once the build is completed, the code will be commited and pushed to remote. To do that manually, use this argument.
  4. --no-css Once the build is completed, a style.css will be generated from the built style.scss. Use this argument to prevent that.
  5. --silly | --verbose | --debug The detail of logs. --silly is meant for developers of the framework and is silly for you to use. --verbose will give you very detailed log. --debug is useful if you wish to see a little more detail than what's logged normally and can help in identifying issues and reporting errors.

Example package.json

{
	"name": "my-theme",
	"version": "0.0.1",
	"author": {
		"name": "Yapapaya",
		"url": "https://yapapaya.com"
	},
	"homepage": "https://yapapaya.com/my-project-name/",
	"description": "A custom description for My Theme",
	"repository": "git@git.yapapaya.in:yapapaya/my-theme",
	"bugs": "git@git.yapapaya.in:yapapaya/my-project-name/issues/",
	"devDependencies": {
		"grunt": "^0.4.5",
		"grunt-cli": "~0.1.9",
		"load-grunt-tasks": "~0.4.0",
		"grunt-contrib-watch": "~0.6.1",
		"grunt-contrib-sass": "~0.7.3",
		"grunt-autoprefixer": "~0.7.2",
		"grunt-csscomb": "~2.0.1",
		"grunt-contrib-concat": "~0.3.0",
		"grunt-contrib-uglify": "~0.4.0",
		"grunt-wp-i18n": "~0.4.3"
	},
	"wpgg": {
		"prettyName": "Theme Name",
		"starter": {
			"repository": "git@github.com:yapapaya/_ya.git",
			"replace": "_ya",
			"gitHeader": "Repo",
			"gitHeaderType": "git",
			"colophon" : {
				"author" : "Yapapaya",
				"url" : "yapapaya.com"
			}
		},
		"components": {
			"names": [ "flex-grid", "font-awesome", "testimonial", "section-with-aside" ],
			"repository": "git@git.yapapaya.in:yapapaya/theme-components.git",
			"replace": "component"
		}
	}
}

Theme slug, text-domain

These can be generated using the package name

"name": "my-project-name"

Theme Headers

This part of the package.json can be used to generate the theme headers.

{
	"name": "my-theme",
	"version": "0.0.1",
	"author": {
		"name": "Yapapaya",
		"url": "https://yapapaya.com"
	},
	"homepage": "https://yapapaya.com/my-project-name/",
	"description": "A custom description for My Theme",
	"repository": "git@git.yapapaya.in:yapapaya/my-theme"
}

The json above will create the theme headers in style.css as follows:

<?php
/*
Theme Name: My Theme
Theme URI: https://yapapaya.com/my-theme/
Author: Yapapaya
Author URI: https://yapapaya.com/
Description: A custom description for My Project Name
Version: 0.0.1
License: GNU General Public License v2 or later
License URI: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html
Text Domain: my-theme
*/

wpgg Data

This part contains information that the wpgg framework needs.

{
	"wpgg": {
		"prettyName": "Theme Name",
		"starter": {
			"repository": "git@github.com:yapapaya/_ya.git",
			"replace": "_ya",
			"gitHeader": "Repo",
			"gitHeaderType": "git",
			"colophon" : {
				"author" : "Yapapaya",
				"url" : "yapapaya.com"
			}
		},
		"components": {
			"names": [ "flex-grid", "font-awesome", "testimonial", "section-with-aside" ],
			"repository": "git@git.yapapaya.in:yapapaya/theme-components.git",
			"replace": "component"
		}
	}
}

This is an example of an internal version we are working on.

  1. prettyName: (optional) Theme Name: header. If not supplied, will be generated from package name by replacing hyphens(-) with spaces and capitalising each word. (my-theme will make My Theme)
  2. functionPrefix: (optional) Prefix for function names. If not supplied, will be generated from package name by replacing hyphens(-) with underscores (_). (my-theme will make my_theme)
  3. starter: (required) Information about the starter theme. We use a custom flavour of _s theme by Automattic. It's called _ya and you can use it as a starter theme or fork it to build your own starter theme.
  • repository: (required) is the git url of the repository of the starter
  • replace: (optional) The namespace of the starter. This will be replaced in function names, text-domain, documentation, etc . See the idea behind it, using _s theme. If not supplied, no replacements will be made.
  • gitHeader: (optional) An optional git header. For example, if you use something like GitHub Updater you'd set this to GitHub Theme URI.
  • gitHeaderType: (optional) Whether to use git style URL or https urls for the git header. For example, if you use something like GitHub Updater you'd set this to https. If not specified, it'll assume git and use the repository value.
  • colophon: (optional) (=a publisher's emblem or imprint, especially one on the title page or spine of a book.) This is the footer credit information ( Baap Theme by Yapapaya) or the copyright information ( © 2017 by Yapapaya.). This will be used for replacing the name and url in footer.php. If not supplied, the colophon will be left, as it is.
    • author: The copyright holder or Theme author.
    • url: The copyright holder's or Theme author's url.
  1. components: (optional) contains information about the components
  • names (optional) is an array of components that are needed for this theme.
  • repository (required) the repository where the archive containing all the components is.
  • replace (optional) a common namespace used by all the components for function prefixes, etc, just like the replace field of starter.

Resource Requirements

A remote git server (GitLab, BitBucket, GitHub, etc) for repositories involved (because they support git archive command, GitHub workaround is for later; we wish to avoid git clone or downloading a .zip of the whole repo because it's too much unnecessary data).

Concept

While developing a new custom theme, a developer usually

  1. Downloads a starter theme.
  2. Performs a find/replace for theme-slug and manually edits the theme header information in style.scss or style.css.
  3. Creates or copies additional files: .js, .scss, .php template files, (for eg. event-single.php) to achieve the desired look and feel
  4. Creates additional code in functions.php required to achieve the desired functionality (for eg, enqueueing scripts and styles)

A lot of these additional work can be repetitive and often follow patterns. It often takes hours to finally get all the basic repetitive stuff in place before the developer can start working on code that they are writing for the first time. Such additional code can be separated and arranged as reusable modules or components.

Component Examples

  • High level slideshow, testimonial, staff-profile, related-posts, gallery, portfolio, call-to-action, etc
  • Low level section-with-aside, hero, hero-with-cta, section-with-image, section-with-round-image, section-with-square-image, hero-with-quote, etc
  • Libraries/ Frameworks font-awesome, masonry, infinite-scroll, a post meta framework like ButterBean, etc

This framework is an attempt to automate and modularise development of custom themes (and plugins) so that the developer can quickly start writing the actual custom part of the code instead of spending hours just getting things in place.

Framework Parts

  1. A node plugin
  2. A starter theme/plugin repository.
  3. A component (reusable code modules) repository

Envisioned Dev Workflow

When starting a new custom theme, a developer will

  1. install wpgg's node plugin
  2. create a new folder for the theme.
  3. create (or clone or copy and modify) a package.json in this folder (see example below) that describes the starter theme and the components needed for this theme.
  4. install wpgg's node plugin.
  5. run wpgg command.
  6. start writing code.

About

A molecular framework and node app for rapid WordPress theme bootstrapping & development

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published