First step to use initialisms that golint suggests,
for example:
Line 116: func GetHtmlRenderer should be GetHTMLRenderer
as see on http://goreportcard.com/report/spf13/hugo
Thanks to @bep for the idea!
Note that command-line flags (cobra and pflag)
as well as struct fields like .BaseUrl and .Url
that are used in Go HTML templates need more work
to maintain backward-compatibility, and thus
are NOT yet dealt with in this commit.
First step in fixing #959.
Make sure that the file separator is added to the temp dir in all cases.
This prevents cache temp files being written to the root temp folder.
Fixes#910
Temporary workaround for the bug fix and resulting
behavioral change in purell.NormalizeURLString():
a leading '/' was inadvertently to relative links,
but no longer, see #878.
I think the real solution is to allow Hugo to
make relative URL with relative path,
e.g. "../../post/hello-again/", as wished by users
in issues #157, #622, etc., without forcing
relative URLs to begin with '/'.
Once the fixes are in, let's remove this kludge
and restore SanitizeUrl() to the way it was.
Fixes#878
Allocates less memory:
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkStripHTML 6572 6695 +1.87%
benchmark old allocs new allocs delta
BenchmarkStripHTML 5 4 -20.00%
benchmark old bytes new bytes delta
BenchmarkStripHTML 848 737 -13.09%
Compared to 0.12:
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkStripHTML 10210 6695 -34.43%
benchmark old allocs new allocs delta
BenchmarkStripHTML 6 4 -33.33%
benchmark old bytes new bytes delta
BenchmarkStripHTML 1456 737 -49.38%
go test -test.run=NONE -bench=".*" -test.benchmem=true ./helpers
Old vs new impl (string.Replace vs string.Replacer):
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkStripHTML 10210 6572 -35.63%
benchmark old allocs new allocs delta
BenchmarkStripHTML 6 5 -16.67%
benchmark old bytes new bytes delta
BenchmarkStripHTML 1456 848 -41.76%
The variable scope in the Go templates makes it hard, if possible at all, to write templates with counter variables or similar state.
This commit fixes that by adding a writable context to Node, backed by a map: Scratch.
This context has three methods, Get, Set and Add. The Add is tailored for counter variables, but can be used for any built-in numeric values or strings.
The paths were seen as changed but not static because of the backslashes in
ev.Name. Once the backslashes were added, I discovered that the JSON
sent to livereload was invalid and failed to work because it had backslashes.
Hence the code to replace the backslashes from the path to make them work
in JSON and for the URL.
With this fix, changes to a stylesheet are shown on the page, and if it's a
single file that changed, it's reflected in the browser without reloading the whole
page.
Two new configuration properties, `Paginate` (default `0`) and `PaginatePath` (default `page`) are added.
Setting `paginate` to a positive value will split the list pages for the home page, sections and taxonomies into chunks of size of the `paginate` property.
A `.Paginator` is provided to help building a pager menu.
There are two ways to configure a `.Paginator`:
1. The simplest way is just to call `.Paginator.Pages` from a template. It will contain the pages for "that page" (`.Data.Pages` will (like today) contain all the pages).
2. Select a sub-set of the pages with the available template functions and pass the slice to `.Paginate` : `{{ range (.Paginate (where .Data.Pages "Type" "post")).Pages }}`
**NOTE:** For a given Node, it's one of the options above. It's perfectly legitimate to iterate over the same pager more than once, but it's static and cannot change.
The `.Paginator` contains enough information to build a full-blown paginator interface.
The pages are built on the form (note: BLANK means no value, i.e. home page):
```
[SECTION/TAXONOMY/BLANK]/index.html
[SECTION/TAXONOMY/BLANK]/page/1/index.html => redirect to [SECTION/TAXONOMY/BLANK]/index.html
[SECTION/TAXONOMY/BLANK]/page/2/index.html
....
```
Fixes#96
Make Blackfriday's `HTML_SMARTYPANTS_FRACTIONS` option
user-configurable. Defaults to `true` as before. See
discussions at:
http://discuss.gohugo.io/t/any-way-to-disable-smart-fractions/328
Thanks to @bjornerik and @spf13 for laying the groundwork
making it easy to expose Blackfriday's underlying configurable
options.
canonifyUrls=true, RelPermalink and baseUrl with sub-path did not work.
This fixes that by adding a check for canonifyUrl=trues=true in RelPermalink().
So given
- baseUrl "http://somehost.com/sub/"
- the path "some-path/file.html"
For canonifyUrls=false RelPermalink() returns "/sub/some-path/file.html"
For canonifyUrls=true RelPermalink() returns "/some-path/file.html"
In the last case, the Url will be made absolute and clickable in a later step.
This commit also makes the menu urls defined in site config releative. To make them work with canonifying of urls, the context root is prepended if canonifying is turned off.
Fixes#519Fixes#711
(Experimental) reStructuredText support was working in v0.12,
but was no longer handled after some refactoring in v0.13-DEV.
That experimental support is now restored.
Furthermore, check for both rst2html and rst2html.py in the PATH,
and execute whichever is found.
See #472 for more information.
The flag `HTML_SMARTYPANTS_ANGLED_QUOTES` was added to Blackfriday on Black Friday. This configures rendering of double quotes as angled left and right quotes («
»).
Typical use cases would be either or, or combined, but never in the same
document. As an example would be a person from Norway; he has a blog in both
English and Norwegian (his native tongue); he would then configure Blackfriday
to use angled quotes for the Norwegian section, but keep them as reqular
double quotes for the English.
This commit adds configuration support for this new flag, configuration that can be set in the site configuration, but overridden in page front matter.
Fixes#605
File handling was broken on Windows. This commit contains a revision of the path handling with separation of file paths and urls where needed.
There may be remaining issues and there may be better ways to do this, but it is easier to start that refactoring job with a set of passing tests.
Fixes#687Fixes#660
Enable blackfriday.EXTENSION_AUTO_HEADER_IDS to generate the name of the
header ID from the text in the header. Works for prefix and underline
headers.
- TOC extraction had to be modified to look for `<li><a href="#`>
instead of `#toc_` because of this change.
- Fixed a number of tests that depended on the presence of `toc_` with
as an `id` or as a `href` value.
- Renames the earlier parameter `footnoteref` to `documentId` as it more
accurately represents the nature of the parameter. The `documentId` is
appended to all generated headers through the new HTML renderer
parameter `HeaderIDSuffix`.
This commit contains a restructuring and partial rewrite of the shortcode handling.
Prior to this commit rendering of the page content was mingled with handling of the shortcodes. This led to several oddities.
The new flow is:
1. Shortcodes are extracted from page and replaced with placeholders.
2. Shortcodes are processed and rendered
3. Page is processed
4. The placeholders are replaced with the rendered shortcodes
The handling of summaries is also made simpler by this.
This commit also introduces some other chenges:
1. distinction between shortcodes that need further processing and those who do not:
* `{{< >}}`: Typically raw HTML. Will not be processed.
* `{{% %}}`: Will be processed by the page's markup engine (Markdown or (infuture) Asciidoctor)
The above also involves a new shortcode-parser, with lexical scanning inspired by Rob Pike's talk called "Lexical Scanning in Go",
which should be easier to understand, give better error messages and perform better.
2. If you want to exclude a shortcode from being processed (for documentation etc.), the inner part of the shorcode must be commented out, i.e. `{{%/* movie 47238zzb */%}}`. See the updated shortcode section in the documentation for further examples.
The new parser supports nested shortcodes. This isn't new, but has two related design choices worth mentioning:
* The shortcodes will be rendered individually, so If both `{{< >}}` and `{{% %}}` are used in the nested hierarchy, one will be passed through the page's markdown processor, the other not.
* To avoid potential costly overhead of always looking far ahead for a possible closing tag, this implementation looks at the template itself, and is branded as a container with inner content if it contains a reference to `.Inner`
Fixes#565Fixes#480Fixes#461
And probably some others.