minetest_modding_book/README.md
2018-07-15 23:37:17 +01:00

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# Minetest Modding Book
[Read Online](https://rubenwardy.com/minetest_modding_book/)
Book written by rubenwardy.
License: CC-BY-SA 3.0
## Finding your way around
* `_data/` - Contains list of languages
* `_layouts/` - Layouts to wrap around each page.
* `static/` - CSS, images, scripts.
* `_<lang>/`
* `<section>/` - Markdown files for each chapter.
## Contributing chapters
* Create a pull request with a new chapter in markdown.
* Write a new chapter in the text editor of your choice and
[send them to me](https://rubenwardy.com/contact/).
I'm happy to fix the formatting of any chapters. It is
the writing which is the hard bit, not the formatting.
### Chapter Guidelines
* Prefer pronounless text, but `you` if you must. Never `we` nor `I`.
* Do not rely on anything that isn't printable to a physical book.
* Any links must be invisible - ie: if they're removed, then the chapter must
still make sense.
* Table of contents for each chapter with anchor links.
* Add `your turn`s to the end of a chapter when relevant.
* Titles and subheadings should be in Title Case.
### Making a Chapter
To create a new chapter, make a new file in _en/section/.
Name it something that explains what the chapter is about.
Replace spaces with underscores ( _ )
```markdown
---
title: Chapter Name
layout: default
root: ..
idx: 4.5
---
## Chapter Name
Write a paragraph or so explaining what will be covered in this chapter.
Explain why/how these concepts are useful in modding
* [List the](#list-the)
* [Parts in](#parts-in)
* [This Chapter](#this-chapter)
## List the
Paragraphs
{% highlight lua %}
code
{% endhighlight %}
## Parts in
## This Chapter
```
## Commits
If you are editing or creating a particular chapter, then use commit messages like this:
```
Getting Started - corrected typos
Entities - created chapter
```
Just use a normal style commit message otherwise.
## Adding a new language
1. Copy `_en/` to your language code
2. Add entry to `_data/languages.yml`
3. Add entry to `collections` in `_config.yml`
4. Add your language to the if else in `layouts/default.html`
5. Translate your language code folder (that you made in step 1)
You can translate the file paths, just make sure you keep any ids the same.
## Using Jeykll
I use [Jekyll](http://jekyllrb.com/) 3.8.0
# For Debian/Ubuntu based:
sudo apt install ruby-dev
gem install jekyll github-pages
### Building as a website
You can build it as a website using [Jekyll](http://jekyllrb.com/)
$ jekyll build
Goes to _site/
### Webserver for Development
You can start a webserver on localhost which will automatically
rebuild pages when you modify their markdown source.
$ jekyll serve
This serves at <http://localhost:4000> on my computer, but the port
may be different. Check the console for the "server address"