So, I've been working on optimizing my website. Right now, I have a very nice template going. It looks something like this:
<!doctype html>
<html class="no-js" lang="">
<head>
<!-- shiny optimizations -->
...
<!-- Ooh look! An important example that will help you understand my question! -->
<link rel = "stylesheet" href = "release/base/css/normalize.css">
include "page/head.html"
</head>
<body>
include = "page/body.html"
</body>
</html>
So in each page, it has a makeup of the following
- /release: a directory where minified, compressed files are put
- /source: a directory where the source files are
Now, I have a directory called /base (in the root) and it contains optimizations and other shiny stuff, like normalize, browser compatibility things, etc.
Base is going to stay the same in all projects, and so is the template file, but the locations of the projects will change. Take the following file structure for example.
base
favicon.ico
/css
...
/js
...
source
...
release
...
foo
/release
...
/source
...
index.html
/foobar
/release
...
/source
...
index.html
bar
/release
...
/source
...
index.html
baz
/release
...
/source
...
index.html
So baz, bar, and foo need to reference the optimizations through
../base
Foobar needs to reference it through
../../base
And root just needs to get it through
base
So based on how many files deep something is, I want to change it from
<link rel = "stylesheet" href = "{changeMeBasedOnFileDeepness}/base/css/normalize.css">
To
<link rel = "stylesheet" href = "../../../base/css/normalize.css">
tl;dr: I want to allow files to reference the base directory from wherever they are.
This is being done on github pages, you can view the repo here
Cheers,
TheGenieOfTruth