This repository is the source code for www.odata.org built with Jekyll. Site admins regularly updates the contents to the site.
OData lovers can write blogs to share their experiences with OData. Blogs will be published at www.odata.org/blog. To create a blog post :
- Create a markdown file under _posts folder.
- Name the file
yyyy-mm-dd-your-blog-title.md
- Inside the markdown file, follow the templates: (If you are not familiar with markdown syntax, please refer to the Appendix A section below.
---
layout: post
title: your blog title
date: 2010-03-17 17:59:43.000000000 +08:00
author: Name you want to display
---
[Optional]Description of yourself
Contents of your blog post in Markdown syntax
-
If you want to add images in your post, please add the image under assets folder first and the
src
url should be/assets/img.png
-
If you want to add code in your post, please refer to the Appendix B section below.
-
Then create a pull request for your update, we will publish your blog post after a quick review.
Information about ecosystem will be published at https://www.odata.org/ecosystem. Five categories under ecosystem is now available for contribution, including producers, consumers, live services, sdk (sample-code) and tutorials.
To create a new item of one category :
- Create a markdown file under _ecosys/category folder.
- Name the file
your-item-title.md
- Inside the markdown file, follow the templates:
---
layout: default
category: your category
title: your item title
link: URL of your item
[for **SDK** category ONLY]download: download link of your item
---
Description of your item
Information of OData libraries will be published at https://www.odata.org/libraries.
To create a new library:
- Create a markdown file under _libraries folder.
- Name the file
your-item-title.md
- Inside the markdown file, follow the templates:
---
category: your category
name: your library name
link: possible supported document link of this library
version: supported OData version(s) of this library
object: URL of your item
downloads:
- source: source name1
link: download link1
- source: source name2
link: download link2
---
Description of your library
The category of the libraries is defined as follows:
net ---> libraries information on the .NET platform
java ---> libraries information on the Java platform
javascript ---> libraries information on the JavaScript platform
cpp ---> libraries information on the C++ platform
other ---> libraries information on other platforms
Other improvements including general site improvement ideas, modifying existing pages, adding new pages and etc, please create a GitHub issue or create a pull request.
We highly recommend using Markdown to create a blog post.
Markdown is a text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers. Markdown allows you to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML).
Markdown is very easy to use, with syntax below, you can write a pretty blog post.
You can create a heading by adding one or more #
symbols before your heading text.
# h1
## h2
…
###### h6
You can indicate blockquotes with a >
.
In the words of Abraham Lincoln:
> Pardon my french
*This text will be italic*
**This text will be bold**
You can make an unordered list by preceding list items with either *
or -
* Item
* Item
- Item
- Item
You can make an ordered list by preceding list items with a number.
1. Item 1
2. Item 2
Use single backtick (`) to format text in a special monospace format.
You can use triple backticks to format text as its own distinct block.
You can create an inline link by wrapping link text in brackets ( [ ] ), and then wrapping the link in parentheses ( ( ) ).
[Visit GitHub!](www.github.com)
If you need more advanced guidelines, please refer to:
There are two ways to formatting your code in a blog post.
Markdown coding formatting You can use coding format supported in Markdown, use triple backticks to format text as its own distinct block. This is very easy to use, but not support syntax highlighting
Jekyll supported code formatting Since our site is built with Jekyll, you can also use Jekyll supported code formatting, which supports syntax highlight. To render a code block with syntax highlighting, surround your code as follows:
{% highlight ruby %}
def foo
puts 'foo'
end
{% endhighlight %}
The argument to the highlight
tag (ruby
in the example above) is the language identifier. ruby
here is a short name, for regually used short names:
csharp
for C#javascript
for JavaScriptruby
for Rubycpp
for C++c
for Cjava
for Javajson
for JSONphp
for PHPpython
for Python
If the language you used not listed above, please look for the “short name” on the Pygments’ Lexers page.