Discourse has the ability for themes to have “settings” that can be added by theme developers to allow site owners to customize themes through UI without having to change any line of code and worry about losing their changes with future updates for the theme.
Adding settings to your theme
Adding settings to your theme is a bit different from adding CSS and JS code, that is there is no way to do it via the UI.
The way to add settings is to create a repository for your theme, and in the root folder of your repository create a new settings.yaml
(or settings.yml
) file. In this file you’ll use the YAML language to define your theme settings.
Note: You may find it helpful to make use of the Theme CLI, which tremendously simplifies the development process.
Now if you’re familiar with plugin development, this shouldn’t be a new thing to you - it mostly works the same way as adding site settings to your plugin. Just dump some valid YAML in your settings file and you’ll be good to go.
A valid theme setting must have a name and default value, that’s the bare minimum and it looks like this:
simple_setting: true
As you can probably tell, that will create a setting with the name simple_setting
and it’ll have true
as its default value.
Similarly, you can add something like this:
site_name: My Forums
max_avatars: 7
And you’ll have two more settings, site_name
which will be a string setting with “My Forums” as the default value, and max_avatars
as an integer setting with default value of 7.
You can access your settings in your JS code like this: settings.your_setting_key
.
So until this point we’ve covered the simplest way to define settings. In the next section we’ll dive a bit deeper into the various types of settings and how you can use them.
Supported types
There are 8 types of settings:
integer
float
string
-
bool
(for boolean) list
enum
json_schema
- upload (for images)
And you can specify type by adding a type
attribute to your setting like this:
float_setting:
type: float
default: 3.14
I should say that you don’t always have to explicitly set a type
attribute because Discourse is smart enough to work out the setting type from the setting’s default value. So you can reduce the above example to this:
float_setting:
default: 3.14
That said, you need to set a type attribute when working with list
and enum
settings, otherwise Discourse will not recognize them correctly.
List Setting:
whitelisted_fruits:
default: apples|oranges
type: list
Enum Setting:
favorite_fruit:
default: orange
type: enum
choices:
- apple
- banana
In case the difference between list and enum settings is not clear to you: enum settings allow your theme users to select only one value from a set of values defined by you (see the choices
attribute).
On the other hand, list settings allow your users to create their own list (i.e. an array) of values. They can add to or remove from the setting’s default list of values.
You can set the default list of values for the setting by joining the values with a vertical bar | character. See the list setting in the example above.
You can see a real-world use case for list settings here: Auto-Linkify Words.
Note: Pay attention to indentation when working with YAML because YAML is very picky about spaces and will throw a syntax error if your code indentation is incorrect.
json_schema
type
The JSON Schema type setting is a new and unique setting type that allows you to accomplish a lot of complex settings. [1]
Creating the Setting:
Unlike other settings where you defined the type of setting using the type
keyword, the JSON Schema type setting has its own keyword (json_schema
) where you build out a JSON object instead. This type of setting also requires a default value in order to work correctly.
Here’s how the setting is built in the welcome link banner component:
banner_links:
default: >-
[{"icon":"info-circle","text":"about this site","url":"/faq"},
{"icon":"users","text":"meet our staff","url":"/about"},
{"icon":"star","text":"your preferences","url":"/my/preferences"}]
json_schema: '{
"type": "array",
"format": "table",
"uniqueItems": true,
"items": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"icon": {
"type": "string",
"minLength": 1
},
},
"text": {
"type": "string",
"minLength": 1
},
"url": {
"type": "string"
}
},
"additionalProperties": false
}}'
The JSON Schema builder is developed using the json-editor
library. For more information on how to define schemas and understanding what properties and values are available, click here.
How the Setting Appears in the UI:
Once the JSON structure is built, you will see a Launch Editor button in your theme’s settings page.
Clicking on this button will bring up a modal which will allow admins to edit, remove, add, duplicate, and re-order custom fields for the parameters you defined in JSON.
Using the setting’s values in your templates
To make use of the setting’s values inside your theme-component, you will first need to parse the JSON using the JSON.parse()
method.
For example, you might create a Glimmer Component with a getter to parse your setting’s JSON like so:
import Component from "@glimmer/component";
export default class PracticeComponent extends Component {
get bannerLinks() {
return JSON.parse(settings.banner_links);
}
}
You can then reference your getter inside your template file and loop through the array’s contents to output the data like so:
{{#each bannerLinks as |link|}}
<div class="header-dropdown-toggle">
<a class="icon" href={{link.url}} tabindex="0">
<h3 title={{link.icon}}>{{d-icon link.icon}}</h3>
</a>
</div>
{{/each}}
Setting description and localizations
You can add description text to your theme setting and it’ll be shown as a label directly under the setting. To do that simply add a description
attribute to your setting like so:
whitelisted_fruits:
default: apples|oranges
type: list
description: "This text will be displayed under this setting and it explains what the setting does!"
And you’ll get this:
Multiple languages support
If you know more than one language, and you’d like to add support for those languages to your theme, then you can totally do that provided that Discourse supports said languages.
First of all, make sure the language you want to support is in this list:
Languages list
Code | Name | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
ar | اللغة العربية | |||
bs_BA | bosanski jezik | |||
ca | català | |||
cs | čeština | |||
da | dansk | |||
de | Deutsch | |||
el | ελληνικά | |||
en | English | |||
es | Español | |||
et | eesti | |||
fa_IR | فارسی | |||
fi | suomi | |||
fr | Français | |||
gl | galego | |||
he | עברית | |||
id | Indonesian | |||
it | Italiano | |||
ja | 日本語 | |||
ko | 한국어 | |||
lv | latviešu valoda | |||
nb_NO | Norsk bokmål | |||
nl | Nederlands | |||
pl_PL | język polski | |||
pt | Português | |||
pt_BR | Português (BR) | |||
ro | limba română | |||
ru | Русский | |||
sk | slovenčina | |||
sq | Shqip | |||
sr | српски језик | |||
sv | svenska | |||
te | తెలుగు | |||
th | ไทย | |||
tr_TR | Türkçe | |||
uk | українська мова | |||
ur | اردو | |||
vi | Việt Nam | |||
zh_CN | 中文 | |||
zh_TW | 中文 (TW) |
(If you can’t see your language in the list then you might want to take a look at How to add a new language)
Then you’ll need find your language code from the above list and use the language code as a key under the description
attribute and translation as a value for the key like so:
whitelisted_fruits:
default: apples|oranges
type: list
description:
en: English text
ar: نص باللغة العربية
fr: Texte français
And now you have support for 3 languages: English, Arabic and French.
Min and max attributes
Sometimes you may need to specify limits that a setting value can’t exceed to prevent your users from accidentally breaking the theme or possibly the whole site.
To specify limits, simply add a min
or max
or both attributes to your setting like so:
integer_setting:
default: 10
min: 5
max: 100
You can specify limits to integer
, float
and string
type settings. For integer
and float
settings, the value of the setting itself is checked against the limits. And for string
settings, the length of the value is checked against the specified limits.
If your user tries to enter a value that’s not within the allowed range, they’ll see an error telling them what the min and max values are.
Access to settings in your JS/CSS/Handlebars
To have access to setting in your theme JS code, the script
tag that wraps your code must have a type="text/discourse-plugin"
attribute as well as version
specified like so:
<script type="text/discourse-plugin" version="0.8.13">
alert(settings.integer_setting + 1);
console.log(settings.string_setting);
</script>
In CSS, you’ll get a variable created for every setting of your theme and each variable will have the same name as the setting it represents.
So if you had a float setting called global_font_size
and a string setting called site_background
, you could do something like this in your theme CSS:
html {
font-size: #{$global-font-size}px;
background: $site-background;
}
Similarly, theme settings are available in handlebars templates that you define in your theme whether you’re overriding a core template, or creating your own. For example if you have something like this in your theme:
<script type='text/x-handlebars' data-template-name='my-template'>
<h1>{{theme-setting 'your_setting_key'}}</h1>
</script>
It’ll render with your setting value.
You may want to use a boolean setting as a condition for an {{#if}}
block in your template, this is how you can do that:
<script type='text/x-handlebars' data-template-name='my-template'>
{{#if (theme-setting 'my_boolean_setting')}}
<h1>Value is true!</h1>
{{else}}
<h1>Value is false!</h1>
{{/if}}
</script>
If you have a question about this or there is something unclear, feel free to ask - I’ll try to answer/clarify as much as I can. Also this is a wiki post, so contributions to improve this are greatly appreciated!
Frequently Asked Questions
Not directly; you’ll need to use the registerConnectorClass
plugin API to add an attribute that has the current year to the connector instance behind your connector template. See an example from my theme.
My theme sets the tabs
attributes which is then referenced in the Handlebars template at the end of the file. You can do something like this.set("year", compute current year here)
in the setupComponent
method and then in your template you can access the year value like this {{year}}
.
You can use the Ember’s html-safe
helper here and it will render the HTML instead of the text.
{{html-safe (theme-setting "my_text")}}
No, that’s the version of our Plugin API
We bump that every time a new method is added to the API so that themes / plugins which relay on methods that were recently added to the plugin API don’t end up breaking sites which haven’t been updated.
You don’t really need to worry about this a lot because:
- We don’t add new methods very often
- Most sites that use Discourse are updated very frequently.
Is it possible to access the theme settings from within the Ruby code as opposed to the JS?
To access theme settings in Ruby you need to call the settings
method on a theme like so: Theme.find(<id>).settings
. It will return an array which contains a ThemeSettingsManager
instance for each setting and from it you can get the setting name and value by calling the name
and value
methods respectively.
Could things break if I don’t prefix my setting names with something like my theme name?
In JavaScript and hbs templates, there is no way this can happen. The settings
variable that you use to access your theme settings is local to your theme and only contains your theme settings. In hbs templates, the settings of each theme are namespaced with their theme’s primary key in the database, so conflicts are impossible.
When I use a list in settings, I get the values as:
value1,value2,value3|value1,value2,value3
Is it possible to modify this output by declaring a different list_type? I’d like to use values from a list in Scss, but I think I could only de-structure the list if the output is formatted as
value1 value2 value3, value1 value2 value3;
You can create custom SCSS functions to transform settings values into whatever format you want. E.g., in your case I think all you need is a string replace function that replaces commas with whitespace and pipes with commas? Here is an implementation of a string replace function in SCSS: Str-replace Function | CSS-Tricks
Is it possible to access settings from another theme or component. e.g. if you have the category icons theme component installed, can you access information about the icons defined in its settings in a different custom theme component?
There is not a supported way to access the settings of another theme/component.
Is it possible to divide the settings into sections, e.g. with horizontal lines in between?
And is it possible to integrate some kind of heading?
No, neither of those things are possible at the moment.
Related Topics
Last Reviewed by @keegan on 2022-10-06T07:00:00Z
This document is version controlled - suggest changes on github.
Last edited by @JammyDodger 2024-05-26T12:20:44Z
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