summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/html/@include.php
AgeCommit message (Collapse)Author
2018-07-26Change the "private file" prefix from "@" to "_"Adam Spragg
It has all the benefits previously mentioned in commit 2f547251, as well as mirroring the common programming convention of using a "_" prefix to identify private variables/functions Hides files beginning with _ from mod_autoindex listings As well as 404ing on files starting with "_", also 404 on files starting with ".", as these are also private. Except for /.well-known/, because that's... well known, and should be public.
2018-06-27Add new "amber" stylesheet and make it defaultAdam Spragg
Because apparently green doesn't show up super-bright with traditional CMYK printing, so my business card with the green-on-black header wouldn't have looked great - unless I was willing to pay a lot of money for special printing. However, apparently yellow does show up well (probably because it's the Y in CMYK), and because old-old-school CRTs came in amber-on-black as well as green-on-black, switching to amber-on-black lets me keep the same kind of aesthetic while being more print-friendly. Also, it looks less Matrix-y. On the one hand, that's better because it looks less derivative. On the other, it's worse, because it doesn't grab you quite as instinctively as it did before. I've done it with alternate stylesheets though, so you can still pick the green colorscheme if you want.
2018-06-25Simplify hiding navigation items slightlyAdam Spragg
The code is now a bit longer, but it's also a bit clearer. The resulting HTML is also clearer.
2018-06-19Output the page head/header/footer with PHPAdam Spragg
Allows putting all the repeated stuff in one place (DRY!), so that if it needs changing it only needs to change once. Start the name of the included file with "@", and disallow the retrieval of files beginning with "@" (returning 404) so that it can't be downloaded, because it won't output anything meaningful. Why "@"? Because it's about the only ASCII punctuation character that doesn't mean anything special to most shells (bash), or programs, and is therefore easy to use as a filename on the command line. I almost went with "+", but it turns out that nvim treats arguments beginning with "+" as options. So "@" it is.