Creating pages
In addition to writing posts, another thing you may want to do with your Jekyll site is create static pages. By taking advantage of the way Jekyll copies files and directories, this is easy to do.
Homepage
Just about every web server configuration you come across will look for an HTML
file called index.html
(by convention) in the site’s root folder and display
that as the homepage. Unless the web server you’re using is configured to look
for some different filename as the default, this file will turn into the
homepage of your Jekyll-generated site.
ProTip™: Use layouts on your homepage
Any HTML file on your site can use layouts and/or includes, even the homepage. Common content, like headers and footers, make excellent candidates for extraction into a layout.
Where additional pages live
Where you put HTML files for pages depends on how you want the pages to work. There are two main ways of creating pages:
- Place named HTML files for each page in your site’s root folder.
- Create a folder in the site’s root for each page, and place an index.html file in each page folder.
Both methods work fine (and can be used in conjunction with each other), with the only real difference being the resulting URLs.
Named HTML files
The simplest way of adding a page is just to add an HTML file in the root directory with a suitable name for the page you want to create. For a site with a homepage, an about page, and a contact page, here’s what the root directory and associated URLs might look like:
.
|-- _config.yml
|-- _includes/
|-- _layouts/
|-- _posts/
|-- _site/
|-- about.html # => http://example.com/about.html
|-- index.html # => http://example.com/
└── contact.html # => http://example.com/contact.html
Named folders containing index HTML files
There is nothing wrong with the above method, however some people like to keep
their URLs free from things like filename extensions. To achieve clean URLs for
pages using Jekyll, you simply need to create a folder for each top-level page
you want, and then place an index.html
file in each page’s folder. This way
the page URL ends up being the folder name, and the web server will serve up the
respective index.html
file. Here’s an example of what this structure might
look like:
.
├── _config.yml
├── _includes/
├── _layouts/
├── _posts/
├── _site/
├── about/
| └── index.html # => http://example.com/about/
├── contact/
| └── index.html # => http://example.com/contact/
└── index.html # => http://example.com/
This approach may not suit everyone, but for people who like clean URLs it’s simple and it works. In the end the decision is yours!