Most obvius benefit of this is to include CSS partials with css file suffix into HTML templates.
A valid workaround would be to rename the file `mystyles.html`, but that doesn't work too good for external editors etc.
The css partial is a method used in some themes before Hugo 0.20, but then it stopped working.
This commit reintroduces that behaviour.
Note that the regular layout lookups for text templates, i.e. "single.json" will be
prefixed with "_text/" on lookup and will only match in the text collection.
Fixes#3273
Before this commit, Hugo used `html/template` for all Go templates.
While this is a fine choice for HTML and maybe also RSS feeds, it is painful for plain text formats such as CSV, JSON etc.
This commit fixes that by using the `IsPlainText` attribute on the output format to decide what to use.
A couple of notes:
* The above requires a nonambiguous template name to type mapping. I.e. `/layouts/_default/list.json` will only work if there is only one JSON output format, `/layouts/_default/list.mytype.json` will always work.
* Ambiguous types will fall back to HTML.
* Partials inherits the text vs HTML identificator of the container template. This also means that plain text templates can only include plain text partials.
* Shortcode templates are, by definition, currently HTML templates only.
Fixes#3221
Before this commit, Hugo used `html/template` for all Go templates.
While this is a fine choice for HTML and maybe also RSS feeds, it is painful for plain text formats such as CSV, JSON etc.
This commit fixes that by using the `IsPlainText` attribute on the output format to decide what to use.
A couple of notes:
* The above requires a nonambiguous template name to type mapping. I.e. `/layouts/_default/list.json` will only work if there is only one JSON output format, `/layouts/_default/list.mytype.json` will always work.
* Ambiguous types will fall back to HTML.
* Partials inherits the text vs HTML identificator of the container template. This also means that plain text templates can only include plain text partials.
* Shortcode templates are, by definition, currently HTML templates only.
Fixes#3221
Add a new rssLimit site configuration option with default of 15. Prior
to this fix, you could create your own RSS feed to override the default
limit of 15, but we still had a hardcoded limit of 50 items set in
`hugolib.renderRSS()`.
With this option in place, the `range first 15 .Data.Pages` logic is no
longer hardcoded into the embedded RSS template.
Because the size of the slice passed to the template is now limited to
rssLimit instead of 50, this commit is a breaking change for sites
with a custom RSS template that expects more than 15 items.
Fixes#3035
Allow all nodes/pages to use date-related OpenGraph meta tags, not
only sites which are using the as-of-yet unfinished .Site.Authors
functionality.
Improve compliance of tags with Facebook's OpenGraph docs for the
"website" and "article" types[0][1]. Also, use the proper tag for
modification date (og:update_time vs article:modified_time).
Generate date published using either .PublishDate or .Date, and use
.Lastmod for modification date, which can use the new enableGitInfo
functionality from Hugo 0.18, but seamlessly falls back to .Date if
the site does not have this enabled/supported.
[0] https://developers.facebook.com/docs/reference/opengraph/object-type/website/
[1] https://developers.facebook.com/docs/reference/opengraph/object-type/article/
Note that this looks like overkill for just the logger, and that is correct,
but this will make sense once we start with the template handling etc.
Updates #2701
This commit adds a truncate template function for safely truncating text without
breaking words. The truncate function is HTML aware, so if the input text is a
template.HTML it will be truncated without leaving broken or unclosed HTML tags.
{{ "this is a very long text" | truncate 10 " ..." }}
{{ "With [Markdown](/markdown) inside." | markdownify | truncate 10 }}