Sage is a WordPress starter theme with a modern development workflow.
Write stylesheets with Sass, automatically check your JavaScript for errors, optimize images, enable synchronized browser testing, and more.
- Webpack is used as a build tool for compiling stylesheets, checking for JavaScript errors, optimizing images, and concatenating and minifying files
- BrowserSync for keeping multiple browsers and devices synchronized while testing, along with injecting updated CSS and JS into your browser while you're developing
- Bootstrap
- Template inheritance with the theme wrapper
- ARIA roles and microformats
- Posts use the hNews microformat
- Multilingual ready and over 30 available community translations
Install the Soil plugin to enable additional recommended features:
- Load jQuery from the jQuery CDN
- Cleaner WordPress markup
- Cleaner HTML output of navigation menus
- Root relative URLs
- Nice search
- Google Analytics snippet from HTML5 Boilerplate
- Move all JS to the footer
- Disable trackbacks and pingbacks
See a complete working example in the roots-example-project.com repo.
Make sure all dependencies have been installed before moving on:
From the command line, run the following commands from the root of your WordPress site (where composer.json exists). These instructions assume you're using a Bedrock-based WordPress setup. If you're using Vagrant, make sure to run these commands from the Vagrant box (vagrant ssh). Create a new theme based on Sage by using Composer's create-project:
# @ example.com/site
$ composer create-project roots/sage web/app/themes/your-theme-name 9.0.0-alpha.1Then activate the theme via wp-cli:
# @ example.com/site
$ wp theme activate your-theme-namethemes/theme-name/ # → Root of your Sage based theme
├── assets # → Front-end assets
│ ├── config.json # → Settings for compiled assets
│ ├── fonts/ # → Theme fonts
│ ├── images/ # → Theme images
│ ├── scripts/ # → Theme JS
│ └── styles/ # → Theme stylesheets
├── composer.json # → Autoloading for `src/` files
├── composer.lock # → Composer lock file (never manually edit)
├── dist/ # → Built theme assets (never manually edit)
├── functions.php # → Never manually edit
├── index.php # → Never manually edit
├── node_modules/ # → Node.js packages (never manually edit)
├── package.json # → Node.js dependencies and scripts
├── screenshot.png # → Theme screenshot for WP admin
├── src/ # → Theme PHP
├── style.css # → Theme meta information
├── templates/ # → Theme templates
│ ├── layouts/ # → Base templates
│ └── partials/ # → Partial templates
├── vendor/ # → Composer packages (never manually edit)
├── watch.js # → Webpack/BrowserSync watch config
└── webpack.config.js # → Webpack configEdit src/lib/setup.php to enable or disable theme features, setup navigation menus, post thumbnail sizes, post formats, and sidebars.
Sage uses Webpack as a build tool and npm to manage front-end packages.
From the command line on your host machine (not on your Vagrant development box), navigate to the theme directory then run npm install:
# @ example.com/site/web/app/themes/your-theme-name
$ npm installYou now have all the necessary dependencies to run the build process.
npm run build— Compile and optimize the files in your assets directorynpm run watch— Compile assets when file changes are made, start BrowerSync sessionnpm run build:production— Compile assets for production
To use BrowserSync during npm watch you need to update devUrl at the bottom of assets/config.json to reflect your local development hostname.
For example, if your local development URL is https://project-name.dev you would update the file to read:
...
"devUrl": "https://project-name.dev",
...Sage documentation is available at https://roots.io/sage/docs/.
Contributions are welcome from everyone. We have contributing guidelines to help you get started.
Keep track of development and community news.
- Participate on the Roots Discourse
- Follow @rootswp on Twitter
- Read and subscribe to the Roots Blog
- Subscribe to the Roots Newsletter
- Listen to the Roots Radio podcast