hugo/docs/content/en/methods/page/Paginate.md

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---
title: Paginate
description: Paginates a collection of pages.
categories: []
keywords: []
action:
related:
- methods/page/Paginator
returnType: page.Pager
signatures: ['PAGE.Paginate COLLECTION [N]']
---
[Pagination] is the process of splitting a list page into two or more pagers, where each pager contains a subset of the page collection and navigation links to other pagers.
By default, the number of elements on each pager is determined by the value of the `paginate` setting in your site configuration. The default value is `10`. Override the value in your site configuration by providing a second argument, an integer, when calling the `Paginate` method.
{{% note %}}
There is also a `Paginator` method on `Page` objects, but it can neither filter nor sort the page collection.
The `Paginate` method is more flexible.
{{% /note %}}
You can invoke pagination on the home page template, [`section`] templates, [`taxonomy`] templates, and [`term`] templates.
{{< code file=layouts/_default/list.html >}}
{{ $pages := where .Site.RegularPages "Section" "articles" }}
{{ $pages = $pages.ByTitle }}
{{ range (.Paginate $pages 7).Pages }}
<h2><a href="{{ .RelPermalink }}">{{ .Title }}</a></h2>
{{ end }}
{{ template "_internal/pagination.html" . }}
{{< /code >}}
In the example above, we:
1. Build a page collection
2. Sort the collection by title
3. Paginate the collection, with 7 elements per pager
4. Range over the paginated page collection, rendering a link to each page
5. Call the internal "pagination" template to create the navigation links between pagers.
{{% note %}}
Please note that the results of pagination are cached. Once you have invoked either the `Paginator` or `Paginate` method, the paginated collection is immutable. Additional invocations of these methods will have no effect.
{{% /note %}}
[context]: /getting-started/glossary/#context
[pagination]: /templates/pagination/
[`section`]: /getting-started/glossary/#section
[`taxonomy`]: /getting-started/glossary/#taxonomy
[`term`]: /getting-started/glossary/#term