Skip to content

atmostfear-entertainment/aegis

Repository files navigation

Aegis

Welcome to the Aegis Theme development repository.

Aegis

Table of Contents

Introduction

Aegis stands tall in the realm of Full Site Editing (FSE) themes, offering a steadfast foundation that seamlessly fuses Vanilla JS with the adaptability of Flexbox Grid.

Description

Aegis epitomizes a perfect balance between performance and aesthetics. Utilizing the prowess of Vanilla JavaScript, it ensures a lightweight and powerful foundation. The integration of Flexbox Grid means the theme is entirely responsive, flexible, and easy to extend, always prioritizing quality.

Upholding the highest coding standards, Aegis is the ultimate choice for creating scalable websites, from intimate personal blogs to professional portfolios and expansive business sites.

Designed for expansive compatibility, Aegis effortlessly supports multisite configurations and is primed for WooCommerce, search engine optimization, and learning management system functionalities. Every detail of this theme has been meticulously designed, emphasizing performance, accessibility, and user experience. Built to endure, Aegis is a theme destined to remain relevant and efficient through the ages.

Working with Block Themes

When you activate Aegis, it operates in a manner similar to traditional WordPress themes, allowing you to seamlessly create posts and pages as you are accustomed to. However, Aegis distinguishes itself as a block theme, offering enhanced features such as the site editor, patterns, global styles, and much more.

In essence, a block theme like Aegis is a WordPress theme constructed entirely of blocks. This means that in addition to editing the content of posts and pages, you have the capability to use the block editor for modifying every other component of your website, including headers, footers, and various templates. It serves as a comprehensive editor for your website's entire design and layout.

Site Editor

The WordPress site editor heralds a transformative phase in the art of website creation with WordPress. Utilizing the capabilities of blocks, patterns, and a wide array of drag-and-drop design tools, the site editor enables you to construct pages directly within WordPress, obviating the need for a separate page builder.

To refine your website through the site editor, simply navigate to Appearance → Editor. This interface grants you the ability to create and modify templates, develop menus, tailor your site's styles, choose your color palette, fine-tune typography, adjust block styles, and much more. Essentially, this platform serves as your digital canvas, allowing you to design, build, and perfect your website prior to its official launch.

Patterns

Patterns are carefully designed page components that provide a quick method for constructing a specific section of a page or even an entire page layout. Instead of building a page from scratch, WordPress users can now leverage these handy patterns for efficient website design directly within the WordPress Site Editor.

To make use of Aegis's patterns, simply access them via the block inserter while working on posts, pages, or within the site editor itself. These patterns function as flexible design elements that significantly streamline the website construction process.

Creating page designs with patterns

Creating pages featured in the Aegis theme is a streamlined process. Simply insert Aegis's full-page patterns onto any page you desire to design.

For optimal compatibility with the full-page patterns, select the No Page Title template via the editor sidebar. This template effectively removes the default page title from your design. Nevertheless, it is imperative to incorporate an H1 tag within your design to comply with SEO best practices, thereby enabling search engines to accurately identify the primary subject of your page and enhance its ranking.

Global Styles

Global styles constitute a robust feature that enables the comprehensive customization of your website's appearance through the Site Editor. This feature offers a centralized hub where you can modify various styling elements such as typography, fonts, and colors for buttons and links, as well as layout defaults.

Under the hood, the Global styles functionality is driven by a configuration file named theme.json, situated at the root of the theme's directory. This file allows the theme to establish default styles on both a site-wide and block-specific basis. These default styles are then applied universally across your website and can be further customized by users via the Global styles interface.

By leveraging the theme.json file, you can achieve a uniform aesthetic across your website while also providing avenues for customization to meet particular needs or branding objectives. The ultimate outcome is a website that not only exudes a professional design but is also amenable to customization by you or your clients to suit specific requirements.

Template Parts

Template parts in WordPress serve as reusable sections of your website that can be applied across multiple pages or templates. They operate similarly to reusable blocks but function at the template level, making them ideal for elements like headers, footers, or sidebars—components that usually remain constant across most or all pages on your site.

For instance, to maintain a uniform header across all pages, you could create a header template part. Any modifications made to this template part will be automatically reflected on all pages where it is implemented, thereby enhancing the efficiency of site-wide updates.

This methodology not only expedites the design process but also reinforces consistency throughout your website. Instead of laboriously updating identical elements across individual pages, a single modification to the template part will propagate the changes universally.

Within the framework of Full Site Editing (FSE), these template parts can be created and edited directly via the WordPress site editor, offering a cohesive and simplified approach to site construction.

Export Your Site

Here is a comprehensive, step-by-step guide on how to export your custom theme:

  1. Navigate to Appearance → Editor to open the WordPress site editor.
  2. Upon entering the site editor, locate the Options menu, typically symbolized by three vertical dots, often referred to as the "kebab" menu, situated in the upper right-hand corner of the interface.
  3. Click on the Options menu, and under the Tools section, you'll find the Export option.
  4. Select Export, at which point WordPress will begin compiling all the modifications and customizations you've made through the site editor. This includes custom blocks, global styles, patterns, templates, and template parts.
  5. WordPress will package these custom elements into a .zip file, effectively creating your new custom theme.
  6. This .zip file will then automatically download to your computer.

This functionality essentially transforms the site editor into a theme builder. After downloading the .zip file, you can upload and install it on any other WordPress website, much like you would with a conventional theme. This feature serves as a convenient mechanism for migrating your custom designs from a local development environment to a live production site, or for sharing your design work with others.

Presets

Layout Presets

theme.json preset theme.json value
contentSize 720px
wideSize 1620px

Spacing Presets

Figma Token CSS Variable theme.json value theme.json slug
Spacing/30 --wp--preset--spacing--30 min(2.5rem, 5vw) 30
Spacing/40 --wp--preset--spacing--40 min(4rem, 8vw) 40
Spacing/50 --wp--preset--spacing--50 min(6.5rem, 13vw) 50
Spacing/60 --wp--preset--spacing--60 min(10.5rem, 24vw) 60

Token Cheat-sheet

Default Global Style

Figma Token CSS Variable Color Name Slug Visual
N/A --wp--preset--color--background #f9f9f9 Background background jpg
N/A --wp--preset--color--foreground #0a0a0a Foreground foreground jpg
N/A --wp--preset--color--primary #3e3d3d Primary primary jpg
N/A --wp--preset--color--secondary #ebebef Secondary secondary jpg
N/A --wp--preset--color--tertiary #d7dade Tertiary tertiary jpg
N/A --wp--preset--color--quaternary #ccd0d4 Quaternary quaternary jpg
N/A --wp--preset--color--quinary #b5bcc2 Quinary quinary jpg

Pattern Creation Guidelines

For the construction of patterns pertaining to the default theme, kindly consult the guidelines delineated in the block-patterns handbook.

  • Category Selection

When crafting block patterns for WordPress, it is imperative to judiciously select the appropriate category for each pattern. WordPress offers a predefined set of categories, each designed to serve a distinct purpose. We would recommend adhering to these default categories. Multiple categories may be applied by separating them with commas. A list of the relevant slugs is available for your reference.

  • Hiding patterns from the inserter

To regulate the visibility of your block pattern within the WordPress inserter, one can include a specific line of code during the pattern's registration process. This practice is generally employed for utility patterns that are not intended for direct user access via the inserter or the pattern library.

Such utility patterns are often created for specialized purposes, like translation, as exemplified by the 404 pattern.

The requisite line of code to accomplish this is provided below:

* Inserter: no

For the purpose of maintaining consistency and clarity, we would recommend prefixing the filenames of hidden block patterns with hidden- when naming the pattern files. This convention will facilitate easier identification and management of such patterns.

  • Different translation functions and when to use them

In software development, especially in the context of internationalization, various translation functions serve distinct purposes. Understanding when to use each one is crucial for effective localization. Here is an overview of different types of translation functions and their recommended use-cases:

esc_html_x(): Utilize this function when translation and HTML safety are required for text display. It is particularly beneficial for multilingual websites, as it offers both translation support and HTML security.

esc_html__(): Utilize the esc_html__() function for the translation and secure rendering of text embedded in HTML, especially when context-specific translations are not necessary. This function serves as a simpler alternative to esc_html_x().

esc_attr__() and esc_attr_x(): Employ the esc_attr__() and esc_attr_x() functions for the secure translation and rendering of text intended for HTML attributes, including elements like image source URLs or link targets. These functions contribute to security by sanitizing user inputs, making them safe for attribute usage.

esc_html_e: The esc_html_e function operates similarly to esc_html__(), with the added convenience of directly outputting the string, thereby eliminating the need for an explicit echo statement.

When dealing with simple HTML tags within translatable strings, employing echo wp_kses_post( __( 'Lorem ipsum <em>Hello</em> dolor sit amet.', 'textdomain' ) ); is advisable. This approach not only makes the syntax more transparent for translators but also affords them the flexibility to remove the markup should it prove incompatible with their respective languages.

These functions serve to bolster both security measures and localization initiatives within WordPress block patterns. They ensure that the text is not only secure for display but also readily translatable, thereby accommodating a global audience.

  • Patterns with images

To generate dynamic image links within your block patterns, it is advisable to employ the get_template_directory_uri() function. This function fetches the URL of the active theme's directory, thereby ensuring that the image links remain relative to the theme. This is crucial for maintaining link integrity, particularly if the website's directory structure undergoes changes or if a child theme is in use. Such a practice is integral for ensuring the long-term stability and portability of your patterns.

It is imperative to include alternative text (alt text) for your images to enhance accessibility. Additionally, removing the IDs from these images is crucial for ensuring their versatility across different implementations.

<!-- wp:image {"id":125,"sizeSlug":"large","linkDestination":"none"} -->
<figure class="wp-block-image size-large"><img src="https://aegis.local/wp-content/themes/aegis/assets/images/project.webp" alt="" class="wp-image-125"/></figure>
<!-- /wp:image -->

For example, turns into:

<!-- wp:image {"sizeSlug":"large","linkDestination":"none"} -->
<figure class="wp-block-image size-large"><img src="<?php echo esc_url( get_template_directory_uri() ); ?>/assets/images/project.webp" alt="<?php echo esc_attr_x( 'Picture of a Project', 'Alt text for project picture', 'aegis' ); ?>"/></figure>
<!-- /wp:image -->
  • Use of Post Types, Block Types and Template Types

We employ Block Types when a pattern incorporates custom markup tailored for a specific block or one of the default template parts, such as the footer or header. Utilizing Block Types will prompt the pattern as a suggestion when a user inserts the corresponding block or template part. This is particularly useful for specialized blocks like query and post-content, as well as for template parts like the footer.

Template Types are used when we wish to offer our pattern as a suggestion for a specific template. In such instances, we provide the template slug, which could be identifiers like 404, home, or single, among others.

Post Types serve to limit the types of posts for which a pattern can be used. This is most commonly employed for full-page patterns, allowing you to specify the kind of posts that can utilize the particular pattern.

  • Spacing, Colors and Font Sizes

Utilizing presets for elements like spacing, font sizes, and colors in WordPress block patterns is favored over using hardcoded values, and this preference is underpinned by three primary considerations:

Consistency: Presets contribute to a harmonious design throughout the theme, thereby fostering a unified visual aesthetic.

Scalability: Employing presets simplifies the process of making global design adjustments, thereby conserving both time and development effort.

Accessibility: The use of presets aids in complying with accessibility guidelines, thereby rendering your patterns more usable and legible for a diverse audience.

  • Additional Tips

It is essential to maintain a clean and adaptable codebase when working with WordPress themes and blocks. Just as it is prudent to remove IDs from image blocks for versatility and broader applicability, it is similarly important to remove the queryId attribute from query blocks. This practice enhances the flexibility of your query blocks, making them more reusable and portable.

Additionally, if any of your template parts possess a theme attribute, this should be eliminated as well. Removing the theme attribute ensures that the template parts can be easily transferred and reused across different themes without being tightly bound to a specific one.

By adhering to these guidelines, you further standardize your blocks and template parts, thereby making them more universally applicable and easier to manage.

<!-- wp:query {"queryId":18,"query":{"perPage":8,"pages":0,"offset":0,"postType":"post","order":"desc","orderBy":"date","author":"","search":"","exclude":[],"sticky":"","inherit":true}} -->

Turns into:

<!-- wp:query {"query":{"perPage":8,"pages":0,"offset":0,"postType":"post","order":"desc","orderBy":"date","author":"","search":"","exclude":[],"sticky":"","inherit":true}} -->

And:

<!-- wp:template-part {"slug":"header","theme":"aegis","area":"header"} /-->

Turns into:

<!-- wp:template-part {"slug":"header","area":"header"} /-->

Here are some best practices that can optimize your workflow and enhance our theme's functionality:

  1. Centralizing Common Properties: If you find yourself repeatedly assigning the same properties to a particular block type—such as applying a border radius to image blocks—consider consolidating these recurring settings in the theme.json file. This promotes a more efficient, DRY (Don't Repeat Yourself) approach to theme development.

  2. Prefixing Full-Page Patterns: For clarity and ease of identification, prefix all full-page patterns with page-. This nomenclature makes it easier to distinguish these patterns from others and streamlines the pattern selection process.

  3. Pattern Order in the Inserter: The order in which patterns appear in the inserter is determined alphabetically by the name of the file. If you wish to influence this order, consider renaming the files accordingly.

By adhering to these practices, you can make your development process more streamlined, your codebase more maintainable, and your user experience more intuitive.

Development

Getting Started with Aegis

To get started with Aegis development:

  1. Set up a WordPress instance.
  2. Download Aegis.
  3. Unzip, and upload this repository into your /wp-content/themes/ directory.

Just in case you find the method to install WordPress locally too overwhelming, then we would recommend experimenting with wp-env, Local or DevKinsta.

Requirements

Warning Please note that the documentation below is based partially on the upcoming Aegis's Full Site Editing features.

Some Aegis features and/or pull requests may require the Gutenberg plugin trunk and will be described or tagged accordingly.

To optionally run tests locally, it will also be required:

You can install the test-specific development dependencies by running npm i && composer install.

The following test commands are then available:

  • npm run lint:css lints and autofixes where possible the CSS
  • composer run analyze [filename.php] statically analyzes PHP for bugs
  • composer run lint checks PHP for syntax errors
  • composer run standards:check checks PHP for standards errors according to WordPress Coding Standards
  • composer run standards:fix attempts to automatically fix errors

Deploying WordPress Locally

Just in case you prefer to install WordPress from the ground up:

You will need a basic understanding of how to use the command line on your computer. This will allow you to set up the local development environment, start it and stop it when necessary, and run the tests.

You will need Node and npm installed on your computer. Node is a JavaScript runtime used for developer tooling, and npm is the package manager included with Node. If you have a package manager installed for your operating system, setup can be as straightforward as:

  • macOS: brew install node
  • Windows: choco install nodejs
  • Ubuntu: apt install nodejs npm

If you are not using a package manager, please check the Node.js download page for installers and binaries.

You will also need Docker installed and running on your computer. Docker is the virtualization software that powers the local development environment. Docker can be installed just like any other regular application.

Development Environment Commands

Ensure Docker is running before using these commands.

How to start the development environment for the first time

Start by cloning the current repository using git clone https://github.com/WordPress/wordpress-develop.git.

Then in your terminal move to the repository folder cd wordpress-develop and run the following commands:

npm install
npm run build:dev
npm run env:start
npm run env:install

Your WordPress site will accessible at http://localhost:8889. You can see or change configurations in the .env file located at the root of the project directory.

To watch for changes

If you are making changes to Aegis core files, you should start the file watcher in order to build or copy the files as necessary:

npm run dev

To stop the file watcher, please press ctrl+c.

To run a WP-CLI command

npm run env:cli <command>

WP-CLI has a plenty of useful commands you can use to work on your Aegis site.

Where the documentation mentions running wp, run npm run env:cli instead. For example:

npm run env:cli help

How to run the tests

These commands run the PHP and end-to-end test suites, respectively:

npm run test:php
npm run test:e2e

How to restart the development environment

You may want to restart the environment if you have made changes to the configuration in the docker-compose.yml or .env files.

You can restart the environment with:

npm run env:restart

How to stop the development environment

You can stop the environment when you are not using it to preserve your computer's power and resources:

npm run env:stop

How to start the development environment again

Starting the environment again is a single command:

npm run env:start

Credentials

These are the default environment credentials:

  • Database Name: wordpress_develop
  • Username: root
  • Password: password

To login to the site, navigate to http://localhost:8889/wp-admin.

  • Username: admin
  • Password: password

To generate a new password (recommended):

  1. Go to the Dashboard.
  2. Click the Users menu on the left.
  3. Click the Edit link below the admin user.
  4. Scroll down and click 'Generate password'. Either use this password (recommended) or change it, then click 'Update User'. If you use the generated password be sure to save it somewhere (password manager, etcetera).

Contributing

Contributing to the Aegis theme or any other open-source project can be a rewarding experience, both for personal growth and for the community at large. Here are some advices for contributors to ensure a smooth and effective contribution process:

Communication and Collaboration

Read the Documentation: Always start by reading the project's documentation and guidelines. Understanding the project's structure and coding standards is crucial for effective contribution.

Join Community Channels: Most projects have a community chat or forum. Join these channels to ask questions, share ideas, and stay updated.

Start Small: If you are new to the project, begin with "good first issue" or "beginner-friendly" tags. These are usually easier to tackle and a good place to start.

Code Quality

Follow Coding Standards: Adhere to the coding standards and guidelines provided by the project. This ensures consistency and readability.

Write Clean Code: Keep your code as clean and as simple as possible. Simplicity often leads to fewer bugs and easier maintenance.

Comment Wisely: Comment your code to explain why you did something, not what you did. Good code mostly speaks for itself.

Testing and Validation

Test Thoroughly: Before submitting a pull request, test your changes rigorously to ensure they do not introduce new bugs.

Cross-Browser Compatibility: Make sure to test the features in various browsers to ensure compatibility.

Version Control

Use Descriptive Commit Messages: Your commit messages should be descriptive enough to let other contributors understand the changes you have made.

Keep Commits Focused: Each commit should represent a single logical change. Avoid mixing multiple changes into a single commit.

Pull Requests and Reviews

Pull Requests Descriptions: When submitting a pull request, include a comprehensive description explaining the need for the changes, how you have implemented them, and any additional context.

Be Open to Feedback: Once you submit a Pull Request, maintainers or other community members may suggest changes. Be open to feedback and willing to make revisions.

Final Checks

Check for Upstream Changes: Before making a pull request, make sure you have updated your fork with the latest changes from the main repository to minimize merge conflicts.

Documentation: If your changes include new features or significant modifications, update the relevant documentation.

By adhering to these tips and best practices, you will be making a valuable contribution to the project and fostering a healthy, collaborative community.

Before contributing, please read the contributors' Code of Conduct and Contributing for information about how to open bug reports, contribute patches, test changes, write documentation, or get involved in any way you can.

If after reading you still wish to contribute with code, the list of open issues is a superb place to start scrutinising for tasks. However, pull requests are preferred when linked to an existing issue.

Be advised that contributing is not just for developers. We welcome anyone willing to contribute with code, testing, triage, discussion, designing while building patterns and templates, making Aegis more accessible, etcetera. So please, feel free to look through open issues, and join wherever you feel most comfortable.

Development

Aegis aims to load fewer assets as much as possible. With a very performant approach, it relies on the Block Editor and Global Styles to provide you with the grand part of the visuals, and will progressively move toward a more Full Site Editing experience.

We strongly advise refraining from building any custom-built PHP or JavaScript-based workarounds for functionality that either Aegis or the Block Editor might provide. Aegis is the first of its kind, hybrid, minimalistic, lightweight, performant and aimed at individuals with color vision deficiency. So please, let us keep its code as simple as possible.

According to those last two points, Aegis has no unnecessary build process.

If you have contributed to Aegis, due credit will be given. we will be updating CONTRIBUTORS.md periodically with the names of contributors; however, feel free to open a pull request or issue if we somehow omitted someone.

Experimenting

If you wish to experiment with custom code, we will encourage you to install and use the Aegis Child for further custom customisation, or further extend it with code snippets.

Repository Description
Aegis Child Theme Official Aegis Child Theme
Aegis Code Snippets Official Aegis Code Snippets

Resources

Here are some resources that may be helpful to context for learning more about developing block-based themes:

Demos

Unfortunately, at the moment, we do not have any demos yet. Even so, we will be toiling on quite a few uniquely crafted demos without following what typically is offered within the ecosystem.

Roadmap

Fortunately, Aegis has a public roadmap that can be accessed to observe both its development and progress.

Credits

The thumbnail on this README.md file:

Aegis by Atmostfear Entertaiment SAS, CCO

Suggestions?

If you would wish to propose any improvements to this repository, please feel free to open an issue or pull request.