Thanks to @bep's new, brilliant helpers.Deprecated() function,
the following functions or variables are transitioned to their
new names, preserving backward compatibility for v0.14
and warning the user of upcoming obsolescence in v0.15:
* .Url → .URL (for node, menu and paginator)
* .Site.BaseUrl → .Site.BaseURL
* .Site.Indexes → .Site.Taxonomies
* .Site.Recent → .Site.Pages
* getJson → getJSON
* getCsv → getCSV
* safeHtml → safeHTML
* safeCss → safeCSS
* safeUrl → safeURL
Also fix related initialisms in strings and comments.
Continued effort in fixing #959.
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.
If you don't have access to the root domain of your site (eg a GitHub project
page) and you try to generate custom permalinks, they must begin with a slash.
Go's URL resolution library sees the leading slash and thinks "this URL starts
at the root", just like a filesystem - so it discards your subdomain and maps
all custom permalinks from the root of your site. Fine if you control the root
domain, not so useful if you don't.
Removing the check for a leading slash fixes this problem. You can now specify
custom permalinks that do not start with a slash, and they will map safely
regardless of what subdomain you upload the generated site under.
Tests have been updated for this commit so that they continue to function.
A sample config.yaml for a site might contain:
```yaml
permalinks:
post: /:year/:month/:title/
```
Then, any article in the `post` section, will have the canonical URL
formed via the permalink specification given.
Signed-off-by: Noah Campbell <noahcampbell@gmail.com>