This is a reference for your blog’s main configuration file. Any values that you add in there will be made available in your templates’ context.
Blog author. Defaults to author.
Site name. Defaults to Socrates site.
Number of posts displayed per page. Used for pagination. Defaults to 10. Setting this to 0 will display all posts on one page.
Your site’s URL. Defaults to http://example.com.
Python strftime formatted date format. Defaults to %B %d, %Y.
Which X to html processor to use; markdown, textile, rst, html, extension. Defaults to markdown. The ‘extension’ setting will decide on the processor to be used based on the post’s file extension:
‘django’ or ‘jinja2’. Defaults to django.
Whether a slash should be appended to post urls. Defaults to true.
Whether to include the day with the month and year in the generated directories and urls. Defaults to false.
By default, the first heading in your document will be <h2>. Only available for reStructuredText posts. Defaults to 2.
If set to true, it won’t bother generating archives. Defaults to false.
If set to true, it won’t bother generating categories. Defaults to false.
Additional settings for the Pygments HTML Parser. It passes the arguments directly to the HtmlFormatter class when it’s instanciated, so these settings include all of the available settings for HtmlFormatter
sample:
pygments:
linenos: true
noclasses: false
style: 'pastie'
The style option has many default built in styles for your code blocks. The ones that ship with Pygments are: monokai, manni, perldoc, borland, colorful, default, murphy, vs, trac, tango, fruity, autumn, bw, emacs, vim, pastie, friendly, native
Whether or not you want pygments to output a pygments.css file in your build directory for css. If set to false it will output the file.