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---
title: apply
description: Given a map, array, or slice, `apply` returns a new slice with a function applied over it.
godocref:
date: 2017-02-01
publishdate: 2017-02-01
lastmod: 2017-02-01
categories: [functions]
menu:
docs:
parent: "functions"
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keywords: [advanced]
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signature: ["apply COLLECTION FUNCTION [PARAM...]"]
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workson: []
hugoversion:
relatedfuncs: []
deprecated: false
draft: false
aliases: []
---
{{< todo > }}
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POTENTIAL NEW CONTENT: see apply/sequence discussion: https://discourse.gohugo.io/t/apply-printf-on-a-sequence/5722;
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{{< / todo > }}
`apply` expects at least three parameters, depending on the function being applied.
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1. The first parameter is the sequence to operate on.
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2. The second parameter is the name of the function as a string, which must be the name of a valid [Hugo function][functions].
3. After that, the parameters to the applied function are provided, with the string `"."` standing in for each element of the sequence the function is to be applied against.
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Here is an example of a content file with `names:` as a front matter field:
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```
+++
names: [ "Derek Perkins", "Joe Bergevin", "Tanner Linsley" ]
+++
```
You can then use `apply` as follows:
```
{{ apply .Params.names "urlize" "." }}
```
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Which will result in the following:
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```
"derek-perkins", "joe-bergevin", "tanner-linsley"
```
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This is *roughly* equivalent to using the following with [range][]:
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```
{{ range .Params.names }}{{ . | urlize }}{{ end }}
```
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However, it is not possible to provide the output of a range to the [`delimit` function][delimit], so you need to `apply` it.
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If you have `post-tag-list.html` and `post-tag-link.html` as [partials][], you *could* use the following snippets, respectively:
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{{< code file = "layouts/partials/post-tag-list.html" copy = "false" > }}
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{{ with .Params.tags }}
< div class = "tags-list" >
Tags:
{{ $len := len . }}
{{ if eq $len 1 }}
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{{ partial "post-tag-link" (index . 0) }}
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{{ else }}
{{ $last := sub $len 1 }}
{{ range first $last . }}
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{{ partial "post-tag-link" . }},
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{{ end }}
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{{ partial "post-tag-link" (index . $last) }}
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{{ end }}
< / div >
{{ end }}
{{< / code > }}
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{{< code file = "layouts/partials/post-tag-link.html" copy = "false" > }}
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< a class = "post-tag post-tag-{{ . | urlize }}" href = "/tags/{{ . | urlize }}" > {{ . }}< / a >
{{< / code > }}
This works, but the complexity of `post-tag-list.html` is fairly high. The Hugo template needs to perform special behavior for the case where there’ s only one tag, and it has to treat the last tag as special. Additionally, the tag list will be rendered something like `Tags: tag1 , tag2 , tag3` because of the way that the HTML is generated and then interpreted by a browser.
This first version of `layouts/partials/post-tag-list.html` separates all of the operations for ease of reading. The combined and DRYer version is shown next:
```
{{ with .Params.tags }}
< div class = "tags-list" >
Tags:
{{ $sort := sort . }}
{{ $links := apply $sort "partial" "post-tag-link" "." }}
{{ $clean := apply $links "chomp" "." }}
{{ delimit $clean ", " }}
< / div >
{{ end }}
```
Now in the completed version, you can sort the tags, convert the tags to links with `layouts/partials/post-tag-link.html` , [chomp][] off stray newlines, and join the tags together in a delimited list for presentation. Here is an even DRYer version of the preceding example:
{{< code file = "layouts/partials/post-tag-list.html" download = "post-tag-list.html" > }}
{{ with .Params.tags }}
< div class = "tags-list" >
Tags:
{{ delimit (apply (apply (sort .) "partial" "post-tag-link" ".") "chomp" ".") ", " }}
< / div >
{{ end }}
{{< / code > }}
{{% note %}}
`apply` does not work when receiving the sequence as an argument through a pipeline.
{{% /note %}}
[chomp]: /functions/chomp/ "See documentation for the chomp function"
[delimit]: /functions/delimit/ "See documentation for the delimit function"
[functions]: /functions/ "See the full list of Hugo functions to see what can be passed as an argument to the apply function."
[partials]: /templates/partials/
[range]: /functions/range/ "Learn the importance of the range function, a fundamental keyword in both Hugo templates and the Go programming language."