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Engagement and dissemination

You can foster reader engagement and improve the dissemination of content on your blog by providing an RSS feed that people can subscribe to and by integrating a discussion system. To learn more about who is or is not reading your posts, you may want to integrate an analytics system. You may also want to post on social media when you public a new blog post. This tutorial gives you a leg up on all of these topics.

Time required: typically 30 minutes

RSS feeds

An RSS feed allows users to subscribe to a blog so that they get notified when you publish new posts. RSS Feed readers are often used to access blogs that a user follows. They usually support downloading the blog content for offline consumption.

An easy way to create an RSS feed for your blog is to use the MkDocs RSS Plugin, which is well integrated with Material for MkDocs. Since it is a third-party plugin, you need to install it before using it.

Add an RSS feed

Install the RSS plugin into your project:

$ pip install mkdocs-rss-plugin

It is important that have the site_name, site_description and site_url settings configured as instructed in the basic blog tutorial. The RSS plugin makes use of this information to construct the feed, so make sure you have configured them.

Now, configure the plugin in the mkdocs.yml. The options provided restrict the pages that RSS entries are created for to the blog posts, which is probably what you want. Also note the configuration of the date fields to match the format that Material for MkDocs uses to accommodate both a creation date and a date for updates.

plugins:
    - ...
    - rss:
        match_path: "blog/posts/.*"
        date_from_meta:
          as_creation: date.created
          as_update: date.updated

Have a look at http://localhost:8000/feed_rss_created.xml to see the RSS feed in all its XML glory. You can use a browser like Firefox or Chrome that can display the raw RSS feed or use curl to get the feed and xmllint to format it. (You may need to install these tools.)

curl -s http://localhost:8000/feed_rss_created.xml | xmllint --format -

You may also want to try your feed with a feed reader. There are various desktop and mobile apps as well as online services. Of course, to use the latter you will need to deploy your project somewhere that is accessible to them.

This minimal configuration should work well if you have not made any changes to the default configuration of the blog plugin. For more information on adapting the feed to your needs, see the RSS plugin's documentation.

Social media buttons

Social media buttons can serve two purposes: to allow your readers to navigate to your social media profiles or to share content you have published via their own accounts.

Links to social media profiles a usually provided in the footer of pages and Material for MkDocs makes this easy. All you need to do is to provide the necessary links and define the icons to use.

Adding social media profile links

Add an extra section to your mkdocs.yml and, within it, a social section to contain a list of link definitions. These consist of the logo to use and the link to the profile.

extra:
  social:
    - icon: fontawesome/brands/mastodon
      name: squidfunk on Mastodon
      link: https://fosstodon.org/@squidfunk

For the icon, you can choose any valid path to an icon bundled with the theme. The name will be used as the title attribute for the icon and including this improves accessibility. For popular social media systems, the link needs to be absolute and needs to include the scheme, most likely https://.

You can also use other schemes. For example, to cerate an icon that allows people to create an email, add this:

extra:
  social:
  - icon: /fontawesome/regular/envelope
    name: send me an email
    link: mailto:<email-address>

Finally, you can specify a URL within your site, such as to your contact page. It is possible to specify only the path to the page:

extra:
  social:
  - icon: /material/mailbox
    name: contact us
    link: /contact

Share and like buttons

Adding buttons that let people share your content on social media is a bit more involved, which is why there are companies offering components for this.

Data Protection

"Share" and "Like" buttons that use integrations provided by social media companies often leave copious data traces even when the user does not interact with these buttons. If you choose to integate such feature on your site please be aware of the data protection implications and your duties as a provider to ensure that processing occurs only once the user has granted consent.

This implementation of share buttons deliberately does not use third party code. It supports sharing to Twitter/X and Facebook without causing a data flow to these companies whenever someone views the pages. Only when someone clicks a share button will there be interactions with those companies' servers.

Add share buttons

In order to add the share buttons, you can add a hook that appends buttons for sharing the current page.

Create a directory hooks in your project root and configure it in your mkdocs.yml:

hooks:
  - hooks/socialmedia.py

Add the file hooks/socialmedia.py with the following Python code:

from textwrap import dedent
import urllib.parse
import re

x_intent = "https://twitter.com/intent/tweet"
fb_sharer = "https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php"
include = re.compile(r"blog/[1-9].*")

def on_page_markdown(markdown, **kwargs):
    page = kwargs['page']
    config = kwargs['config']
    if not include.match(page.url):
        return markdown

    page_url = config.site_url+page.url
    page_title = urllib.parse.quote(page.title+'\n')

    return markdown + dedent(f"""
    [Share on :simple-x:]({x_intent}?text={page_title}&url={page_url}){{ .md-button }}
    [Share on :simple-facebook:]({fb_sharer}?u={page_url}){{ .md-button }}
    """)

The hook first checks if the current page is a blog post and then appends Markdown code for the share buttons. The buttons use icons, so you also need to configure the following markdown extensions:

markdown_extensions:
  - attr_list
  - pymdownx.emoji:
      emoji_index: !!python/name:material.extensions.emoji.twemoji
      emoji_generator: !!python/name:material.extensions.emoji.to_svg

Add a discussion system

Allowing your readers to comment on your posts is a great way of receiving feedback, learning something, as well as giving readers the opportunity to discuss the content and the topic it is about.

There are plenty of discussion system out there and you will need to consider your audience when choosing one appropriate for your blog. Likewise, you will also need to consider existing commitments to communication channels. If you are a heavy user Slack, for example, you may have a string preference for this system. Consider that when you add a communication channel, you will need to be prepared to use it regularly and to moderate discussions.

Giscus integration

In this tutorial, we will be using Giscus because it is free, open source, and uses GitHub Discussions as a backend. Because a lot of users of Material for MkDocs use GitHub, this seems like an obvious choice.

To add Giscuss to your blog you will need to go through a number of steps:

  1. Create a GitHub repository if there is not already one
  2. Turn on discussions and install the Giscus app
  3. Configure the code needed to embed Giscus into your blog
  4. Add the code to your MkDocs project

You may want to create a test repository for this tutorial that you can scrap later on. The instructions below assume that you are user "example" and that you create a repository "giscus-test." The repository will need to be public for people to be able to use the discussions.

In the instructions given below, you will need to replace at least the username but also the repository name if you chose another name such as when you want to work directly on an existing repository.

Turn on discussions and install the Giscus app

Once the repository is set up, go to its settings page and find Features in the General section. Tick the checkbox for Discussions. You will see that Discussions appears in the top navigation for the repository. If you are using a live repository then you may want to add some minimal content to the dicussions section at this point and come back to the tutorial.

Next, you need to install the Giscus app by following the link in this sentence, and choosing Install, then following the instructions to choose where the Giscus app is to be installed:

  1. Choose the account or organization for the repository you want to use.
  2. Choose to install only on select repositories and select the one you want to use. Note that you can choose more than one repository here.
  3. Select Install at the end. You may need to authenticate to give permission for this to happen.
  4. You will end up on the Applications page in your settings, where you can control the Gicsus app and uninstall it if so desired.

That is all the preparation you will need for the repository. Next, it is time to generate a piece of code that embeds Giscuss in your site. The resulting code snippet will look something like this:

<script src="https://giscus.app/client.js"
        data-repo="<username>/<repository>"
        data-repo-id="..."
        data-category="Announcements"
        data-category-id="..."
        data-mapping="title"
        data-strict="1"
        data-reactions-enabled="1"
        data-emit-metadata="1"
        data-input-position="top"
        data-theme="preferred_color_scheme"
        data-lang="en"
        data-loading="lazy"
        crossorigin="anonymous"
        async>
</script>

Configure the code needed to embed Giscus into your blog

Go to the Giscus homepage and configure the embedding code. There are a number of settings:

  1. Choose the language
  2. Enter the username / organization name and repository name
  3. Choose how the discussions are to be mapped to the page on your blog. Because for a blog post the title is the basis of the URL, it makes sense to use the Discussion title contains page <title> option.
  4. Under Discussion Category choose Announcements to limit the creation of new discussions to Giscuss and people with maintainer or admin permissions.
  5. Under Features, select the following:
    1. Enable reactions for the main post
    2. Emit discussion metadata
    3. Place the comment box above the comments
  6. Under Theme, select Preferred color scheme so that Giscus matches the color scheme selected by the user for your site.

With these settings in place, you now need to integrate the code into your site. There is a partial partials/comments.html that exists for this purpose and is empty be default. It is included by the content.html partial, so will be included for every page on your site. You may or may not want this. In this tutorial, you will limit the Giscus integration to only blog posts but it is easy enough to leave out the code that achieves this if you want to have Giscus discussions active for every page.

Add Giscus integration code

First, you need to create an overrides directory that will contain the templates and partials you want to override.

mkdir -p overrides/partials

You need to declare it in your mkdocs.yaml:

theme:
  name: material
  custom_dir: overrides

Now add a file overrides/partials/comments.html and paste in the code snippet you obtained from the Giscus homepage. Look at the result locally and you will see that the integration is active on all pages of the site. If you want to restrict it to your blog posts, you need to add a conditional around the Giscus script that tests if comments should be included. A simple way of doing this is to test for a metadata flag:

{% if page.meta.comments %}
<script>...</script>
{% endif %}

The disadvantage is that you now need to manually turn on comments for each blog post - unless you want to turn them off on some. To get the comments section on all blog posts, use code like this:

{% if page.file.src_uri.startswith('blog/posts') %}
<script>...</script>
{% endif %}

You should see now that the Giscus comments are added at the bottom of your blog posts but not on other pages.

What's next?

This is the end of the blog tutorial. We hope you have enjoyed it and manage to set up your blog the way you like it. There are numerous other features and options that we have not been able to cover here. The blog plugin reference provides comprehensive documentation for the plugin. You may also want to look at the social plugin tutorial to generate social cards for your blog posts that get displayed when you post links to social media systems.