## Basic manual for website editing ### Edit or add documentation pages To edit and/or add documentation, you need to have a [GitHub](https://github.com/login) account. To change documentation files or add a documentation page, simply click `Edit this page` on the page you would like to edit. If you need to add a child page, click `Create child page`. If you need to edit the text that has the markup [markdown](https://github.com/adam-p/markdown-here/wiki/Markdown-Cheatsheet), click on the `Fork this repository` button. Read how to edit files for github ([GitHub docs](https://docs.github.com/en/github/managing-files-in-a-repository/editing-files-in-another-users-repository)). Please note that files have a markup for correct display on the site: the title, the title of the link, the weight (affects the order of files display on the sidebar) and description (optional): --- title: "Title" linkTitle: "Link Title" weight: 1 description: > Description --- ### Start site localy To start the site locally, you need a recent [extended version hugo](https://github.com/gohugoio/hugo/releases) (recommend version 0.75.0 or later). Open the most recent release and scroll down until you find a list of Extended versions. [Read more](https://gohugo.io/getting-started/installing/#quick-install) Add a path to "hugo" in the "Path" environment variable. Clone a repository branch containing the site. For example, using a git command: git clone --branch If you want to build and/or serve your site locally, you also need to get local copies of the theme’s own submodules: git submodule update --init --recursive To build and preview your site locally, use: cd /cvat/site/ hugo server By default, your site will be available at http://localhost:1313/ Instead of a "hugo server" command, you can use the "hugo" command that generates the site into a "public" folder. To build or update your site’s CSS resources you will need [PostCSS](https://postcss.org/) to create final assets. To install it you must have a recent version of [NodeJS](https://nodejs.org/en/) installed on your machine, so you can use npm, the Node package manager. By default npm installs tools under the directory where you run [npm install](https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/v6/commands/npm-install#description): cd /cvat/site/ npm ci Then you can build a website in the "public" folder: hugo [Read more](https://www.docsy.dev/docs/getting-started/)