This commit replaces the regexp driven `replaceShortcodeTokens` with a handwritten one.
It wasnt't possible to handle the p-tags case without breaking performance.
This fix actually improves in that area:
```
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkParsePage 142738 142667 -0.05%
BenchmarkReplaceShortcodeTokens 665590 575645 -13.51%
BenchmarkShortcodeLexer 176038 181074 +2.86%
benchmark old allocs new allocs delta
BenchmarkParsePage 87 87 +0.00%
BenchmarkReplaceShortcodeTokens 9631 9424 -2.15%
BenchmarkShortcodeLexer 274 274 +0.00%
benchmark old bytes new bytes delta
BenchmarkParsePage 141830 141830 +0.00%
BenchmarkReplaceShortcodeTokens 52275 35219 -32.63%
BenchmarkShortcodeLexer 30177 30178 +0.00%
```
Fixes#1148
Section names are also used as the title of the list pages, but naming section folders as `Fish and Chips` and similar didn't work very well.
This commit fixes that.
This commit also changes the title casing of the section titles. Some may argue that this is a breaking change, but the old behaviour was also pretty broken,
even for languages that use title capitalizations, as it didn't follow any particular style guide, `fish and chips` became `Fish And Chips` etc.
Now it just turns the first letter into upper case, so `Fish and Chips` will be left as `Fish and Chips`.
People wanting the good old behaviour can use the `title` template func.
Fixes#1176
To determine if a page is the "Home Page" has inspired lots of creativity in the template department.
This commit makes it simpler: IsHome will tell the truth.
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.
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`.
`GroupBy` is modified to allow it to receive a method name argument for
example `Type` as its first argument. It is only allowed to call with
a method which takes no arguments and returns a result or a pair of
a result and an error.
The functions discussed at #443 are also added
- `ByPublishDate`: Order contents by `PublishDate` front matter variable
- `GroupByPublishDate(format, order)`: Group contents by `PublishDate`
front matter variable formatted in string like `GroupByDate`
- `GroupByParam(key, order)`: Group contents by `Param` front matter
variable specified by `key` argument
- `GroupByParamDate(key, format, order)`: Group contents by `Param`
front matter variable specified by `key` argument and formatted in
string like `GroupByDate`. It's effective against `time.Time` type
front matter variable
Be able to inhibit AbsURL canonicalization of content, on a site
configuration basis. Advantages of being able to inhibit this include
making it easier to rendering on other hostnames, and being able to
include resources on http or https depending on how this page was
retrieved, avoiding mixed-mode client complaints without adding latency
for plain http.
Remove the hugo-nav since it relied on a slow library. The current
build reimplements the absurl functionality based on string replace.
Discovered that my prior implementation missed the requirement for
making absolute paths (/path) absolute with the host, whereas a relative
path is left untouched. Updated the test cases to support this if this
is reimplemented.
Checks to make sure the xml document starts with <?xml. Previously, the
html translate package would write additional details into the document
that caused it to fail.
The render code path would use a fallback if there was an exception.
This change instead relies on explicit declaration of the layout to use
and includes a check to see if the layout indeed exists before
attempting to render it.
Allow content that is not markdown and does not need to be rendered to
exists in the content directory. Currently any valid html or xml
document can exist. Templates are applied to these documents as well.
If you need to have content that doesn't have templates or AbsUrlify
like operations, then continue to put this content in static and it will
be copied over.
I want to move all logic to writing aliases to target so I can pave the
way for writing aliases specific to other runtimes (like .htaccess for
apache or a script for updating AWS or symlinking on a filesystem).
It started with wanting to move templates in template bundles and the
rest followed. I did my best to start grouping related functions
together, but there are some that I missed. There is also the method
Urlize that seems to be a special function used in both worlds. I'll
need to revisit this method.
Tests to ensure rendering dates in templates is working correctly.
Actually, I was running into invalid templates not giving warnings when
I was trying to render a date.
Provide unit test support RenderThing.
One observation is that creating the site.Tmpl variable is a one time
event. site.Tmpl doesn't like additional templates with the same name.
This means that updating a template while in --watch mode requires
throwing away the entire Site object and creating a new one. Not that
this is a bad idea, but it is something I discovered while working on
these unit tests.