It can also be used with an operator like `!=`, `>=`, `in` etc. Without an operator (like above), `where` compares a given field with a matching value in a way like `=` is specified.
e.g.
{{ range where .Data.Pages "Section" "!=" "post" }}
{{ .Content}}
{{ end }}
Following operators are now available
-`=`, `==`, `eq`: True if a given field value equals a matching value
-`!=`, `<>`, `ne`: True if a given field value doesn't equal a matching value
-`>=`, `ge`: True if a given field value is greater than or equal to a matching value
-`>`, `gt`: True if a given field value is greater than a matching value
-`<=`, `le`: True if a given field value is lesser than or equal to a matching value
-`<`, `lt`: True if a given field value is lesser than a matching value
-`in`: True if a given field value is included in a matching value. A matching value must be an array or a slice
-`not in`: True if a given field value isn't included in a matching value. A matching value must be an array or a slice
Loops through any array, slice or map and returns a string of all the values separated by the delimiter. There is an optional third parameter that lets you choose a different delimiter to go between the last two values.
Maps will be sorted by the keys, and only a slice of the values will be returned, keeping a consistent output order.
Works on [lists](/templates/list/), [taxonomies](/taxonomies/displaying/), [terms](/templates/terms/), [groups](/templates/list/)
e.g.
// Front matter
+++
tags: [ "tag1", "tag2", "tag3" ]
+++
// Used anywhere in a template
Tags: {{ delimit .Params.tags ", " }}
// Outputs Tags: tag1, tag2, tag3
// Example with the optional "last" parameter
Tags: {{ delimit .Params.tags ", " " and " }}
// Outputs Tags: tag1, tag2 and tag3
### sort
Sorts maps, arrays and slices, returning a sorted slice. A sorted array of map values will be returned, with the keys eliminated. There are two optional arguments, which are `sortByField` and `sortAsc`. If left blank, sort will sort by keys (for maps) in ascending order.
Works on [lists](/templates/list/), [taxonomies](/taxonomies/displaying/), [terms](/templates/terms/), [groups](/templates/list/)
e.g.
// Front matter
+++
tags: [ "tag3", "tag1", "tag2" ]
+++
// Site config
+++
[params.authors]
[params.authors.Derek]
"firstName" = "Derek"
"lastName" = "Perkins"
[params.authors.Joe]
"firstName" = "Joe"
"lastName" = "Bergevin"
[params.authors.Tanner]
"firstName" = "Tanner"
"lastName" = "Linsley"
+++
// Use default sort options - sort by key / ascending
Tags: {{ range sort .Params.tags }}{{ . }} {{ end }}
// Outputs Tags: tag1 tag2 tag3
// Sort by value / descending
Tags: {{ range sort .Params.tags "value" "desc" }}{{ . }} {{ end }}
// Outputs Tags: tag3 tag2 tag1
// Use default sort options - sort by value / descending
Authors: {{ range sort .Site.Params.authors }}{{ .firstName }} {{ end }}
// Outputs Authors: Derek Joe Tanner
// Use default sort options - sort by value / descending
Authors: {{ range sort .Site.Params.authors "lastName" "desc" }}{{ .lastName }} {{ end }}
Checks if an element is in an array (or slice) and returns a boolean. The elements supported are strings, integers and floats (only float64 will match as expected). In addition, it can also check if a substring exists in a string.
{{ if in "this string contains a substring" "substring" }}Substring found!{{ end }}
### intersect
Given two arrays (or slices), this function will return the common elements in the arrays. The elements supported are strings, integers and floats (only float64).
A useful example of this functionality is a 'similar posts' block. Create a list of links to posts where any of the tags in the current post match any tags in other posts.
Take a string of code and a language, uses Pygments to return the syntax highlighted code in HTML. Used in the [highlight shortcode](/extras/highlighting).
Looks up a content page by relative path or logical name to return the permalink (`ref`) or relative permalink (`relref`). Requires a Node or Page object (usually satisfied with `.`). Used in the [`ref` and `relref` shortcodes]({{% ref "extras/crossreferences.md" %}}).
Given a map, array, or slice, returns a new slice with a function applied over it. Expects at least three parameters, depending on the function being applied. The first parameter is the sequence to operate on; the second is the name of the function as a string, which must be in the Hugo function map (generally, it is these functions documented here). 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. An example is in order:
{{ range .Params.names }}{{ . | urlize }}{{ end }}
However, it isn’t possible to provide the output of a range to the `delimit` function, so you need to `apply` it. A more complete example should explain this. Let's say you have two partials for displaying tag links in a post, "post/tag/list.html" and "post/tag/link.html", as shown below.
This works, but the complexity of "post/tag/list.html" is fairly high; the Hugo template needs to perform special behaviour 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 it is interpreted by a browser.
This is Hugo. We have a better way. If this were your "post/tag/list.html" instead, all of those problems are fixed automatically (this first version separates all of the operations for ease of reading; the combined version will be shown after the explanation).
In this version, we are now sorting the tags, converting them to links with "post/tag/link.html", cleaning off stray newlines, and joining them together in a delimited list for presentation. That can also be written as: