This section covers a few ways that you can control the look and feel of your theme via your own CSS and theme variables.
Custom styles should be added to /assets/css/my_css.css
(where
my_css
can be any name, other than those already in the theme).
To override the fonts used, add a custom CSS file and set the following variables:
// General text
:root {
--pst-font-family-base: "Open Sans";
--pst-font-family-heading: "Open Sans";
--pst-font-family-monospace: "Open Sans";
}
// Navigation bar
.navbar-logo-text {
font-family: "Open Sans";
}
After setting the font, we still need to ensure that it is loaded.
If you are happy loading your fonts from Google Fonts, add them to your config.yaml
:
params:
fonts:
- name: "Lato"
weights: [400, 900]
Alternatively, create layouts/partials/head.html
and add what you need to load the font, e.g.:
<link
rel="stylesheet"
href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/css2?family=Lato:wght@400;900"
/>
We mostly rely on PyData Sphinx Theme’s color variables.
However, we …
To enable code styling, add the following to your config file:
markup:
highlight:
noClasses: false
The default theme is Witch Hazel, but with a blue background. To use a different theme, generate a new stylesheet using:
hugo gen chromastyles --style=monokai > /assets/css/code-highlight.css
You can replace monokai
with any of the themes supported by
Chroma, as listed in their
gallery.
Then, use fenced code blocks and remember to specify the language:
```python
def foo(x):
return x**2
```