Where is custom html on tumblr




















Click your Tumblr blog's name at the top of the Tumblr dashboard. Click "Customize Appearance" on the right side of the screen. Click "Theme" at the top of the Tumblr blog's "Customize" page and a list of possible themes will appear on the page.

The screen will change to display your blog's current HTML code. Rendered for the post at the specified offset. This makes it possible to insert an advertisement or design element in the middle of your posts. Useful if you want to use Javascript to render your posts. A click-through URL for this photo. Defaults to media permalink if one is not set. A closing anchor-tag output only if a click-through URL is set.

URL for the high-res or panorama sized photo of this post. No wider than px or px respectively. URL for the panorama photo of this post. These images can be very big. Should be included inside the A-tags of Link posts. URL for this post's audio file. The number of times this post has been played, formatted with commas. The number of times this post has been played, formatted with commas and pluralized label e.

Rendered if this post uses an externally hosted MP3. Useful for adding a "Download" link. The question for this post. May contain heavily filtered HTML. Portrait photo URL for the reblogged answerer. Rendered for all posts. A contextual time. Standard HTML output of this post's notes with 16x16 sized avatars. Only rendered on permalink pages. Standard HTML output of this post's notes with 64x64 sized avatars. Rendered if this post has notes. This feature is pretty cool — and something I have yet to see in other online tutorials.

If it is, a green checkmark appears so you can move onward. Overall, I think the technology behind Dash is top-notch. If they added an option of making the slideshow fullscreen, the whole experience would be even better.

In my opinion, the tutorial is perfect for a beginner-ish level. All of the above sections were informative. Dash does a good job walking you through the code and explaining what everything does. Then, when all is said and done, you have to export the theme you built in the Dash interface onto Tumblr. But I feel like they sorta leave you hanging at the end. Of course, I then went back into the theme to make my own changes.

The project you build in Dash is very generic. But there were things I wanted to do to my theme that the tutorial never touched upon. I realized at that point how bare-bones the tutorial was. Sure, I now understand how to build a basic Tumblr theme from scratch. This is standard practice for html. This is all that you need for the browser to read your page correctly.

However, at this point you will only see a blank white page. In the next part of the tutorial we will change that, but firstly there are a few other little things that need to be added. First up is the page title. This is what appears on the page tab. The code for this is easy to remember.



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