---
aliases:
- /layout/indexes/
date: 2013-07-01
linktitle: List of Content
menu:
main:
parent: layout
next: /templates/homepage
prev: /templates/content
title: Content List Template
weight: 40
---
A list template is any template that will be used to render multiple pieces of
content in a single HTML page (with the exception of the [homepage](/layout/homepage) which has a
dedicated template).
We are using the term list in its truest sense, a sequential arrangement
of material, especially in alphabetical or numerical order. Hugo uses
list templates to render anyplace where content is being listed such as
taxonomies and sections.
## Which Template will be rendered?
Hugo uses a set of rules to figure out which template to use when
rendering a specific page.
Hugo will use the following prioritized list. If a file isn’t present,
then the next one in the list will be used. This enables you to craft
specific layouts when you want to without creating more templates
than necessary. For most sites only the \_default file at the end of
the list will be needed.
### Section Lists
A Section will be rendered at /`SECTION`/
* /layouts/section/`SECTION`.html
* /layouts/\_default/section.html
* /layouts/\_default/list.html
* /themes/`THEME`/layouts/section/`SECTION`.html
* /themes/`THEME`/layouts/\_default/section.html
* /themes/`THEME`/layouts/\_default/list.html
### Taxonomy Lists
A Taxonomy will be rendered at /`PLURAL`/`TERM`/
* /layouts/taxonomy/`SINGULAR`.html
* /layouts/\_default/taxonomy.html
* /layouts/\_default/list.html
* /themes/`THEME`/layouts/taxonomy/`SINGULAR`.html
* /themes/`THEME`/layouts/\_default/taxonomy.html
* /themes/`THEME`/layouts/\_default/list.html
### Section RSS
A Section’s RSS will be rendered at /`SECTION`/index.xml
*Hugo ships with its own ATOM 2.0 RSS template. In most cases this will
be sufficient, and an RSS template will not need to be provided by the
user.*
Hugo provides the ability for you to define any RSS type you wish, and
can have different RSS files for each section and taxonomy.
* /layouts/section/`SECTION`.rss.xml
* /layouts/\_default/rss.xml
* /themes/`THEME`/layouts/section/`SECTION`.rss.xml
* /themes/`THEME`/layouts/\_default/rss.xml
### Taxonomy RSS
A Taxonomy’s RSS will be rendered at /`PLURAL`/`TERM`/index.xml
*Hugo ships with its own ATOM 2.0 RSS template. In most cases this will
be sufficient, and an RSS template will not need to be provided by the
user.*
Hugo provides the ability for you to define any RSS type you wish, and
can have different RSS files for each section and taxonomy.
* /layouts/taxonomy/`SINGULAR`.rss.xml
* /layouts/\_default/rss.xml
* /themes/`THEME`/layouts/taxonomy/`SINGULAR`.rss.xml
* /themes/`THEME`/layouts/\_default/rss.xml
## Variables
List pages are of the type "node" and have all the [node
variables](/templates/variables/) and [site
variables](/templates/variables/) available to use in the templates.
Taxonomy pages will additionally have:
**.Data.`singular`** The taxonomy itself.
## Example List Template Pages
### Example section template (post.html)
This content template is used for [spf13.com](http://spf13.com).
It makes use of [partial templates](/templates/partials). All examples use a
[view](/templates/views/) called either "li" or "summary" which this example site
defined.
{{ partial "header.html" . }}
{{ partial "subheader.html" . }}
{{ .Title }}
{{ range .Data.Pages }}
{{ .Render "li"}}
{{ end }}
{{ partial "footer.html" }}
### Example taxonomy template (tag.html)
This content template is used for [spf13.com](http://spf13.com).
It makes use of [partial templates](/templates/partials). All examples use a
[view](/templates/views/) called either "li" or "summary" which this example site
defined.
{{ partial "header.html" . }}
{{ partial "subheader.html" . }}
{{ .Title }}
{{ range .Data.Pages }}
{{ .Render "summary"}}
{{ end }}
{{ partial "footer.html" }}
## Ordering Content
In the case of Hugo each list will render the content based on metadata provided in the [front
matter](/content/front-matter). See [ordering content](/content/ordering) for more information.
Here are a variety of different ways you can order the content items in
your list templates:
### Order by Weight -> Date (default)
{{ range .Data.Pages }}
{{ .Title }}
{{ .Date.Format "Mon, Jan 2, 2006" }}
{{ end }}
### Order by Weight -> Date
{{ range .Data.Pages.ByWeight }}
{{ .Title }}
{{ .Date.Format "Mon, Jan 2, 2006" }}
{{ end }}
### Order by Date
{{ range .Data.Pages.ByDate }}
{{ .Title }}
{{ .Date.Format "Mon, Jan 2, 2006" }}
{{ end }}
### Order by PublishDate
{{ range .Data.Pages.ByPublishDate }}
{{ .Title }}
{{ .PublishDate.Format "Mon, Jan 2, 2006" }}
{{ end }}
### Order by Length
{{ range .Data.Pages.ByLength }}
{{ .Title }}
{{ .Date.Format "Mon, Jan 2, 2006" }}
{{ end }}
### Order by Title
{{ range .Data.Pages.ByTitle }}
{{ .Title }}
{{ .Date.Format "Mon, Jan 2, 2006" }}
{{ end }}
### Order by LinkTitle
{{ range .Data.Pages.ByLinkTitle }}
{{ .LinkTitle }}
{{ .Date.Format "Mon, Jan 2, 2006" }}
{{ end }}
### Reverse Order
Can be applied to any of the above. Using Date for an example.
{{ range .Data.Pages.ByDate.Reverse }}
{{ .Title }}
{{ .Date.Format "Mon, Jan 2, 2006" }}
{{ end }}
## Grouping Content
Hugo provides some grouping functions for list pages. You can use them to
group pages by Section, Type, Date etc.
Here are a variety of different ways you can group the content items in
your list templates:
### Grouping by Page field
{{ range .Data.Pages.GroupBy "Section" }}
{{ .Key }}
{{ end }}
### Grouping by Page date
{{ range .Data.Pages.GroupByDate "2006-01" }}
{{ .Key }}
{{ end }}
### Grouping by Page publish date
{{ range .Data.Pages.GroupByPublishDate "2006-01" }}
{{ .Key }}
{{ end }}
### Grouping by Page param
{{ range .Data.Pages.GroupByParam "param_key" }}
{{ .Key }}
{{ end }}
### Grouping by Page param in date format
{{ range .Data.Pages.GroupByParamDate "param_key" "2006-01" }}
{{ .Key }}
{{ end }}
### Reversing Key Order
The ordering of the groups is performed by keys in alpha-numeric order (A–Z,
1–100) and in reverse chronological order (newest first) for dates.
While these are logical defaults, they are not always the desired order. There
are two different syntaxes to change the order, they both work the same way, so
it’s really just a matter of preference.
#### Reverse method
{{ range (.Data.Pages.GroupBy "Section").Reverse }}
...
{{ range (.Data.Pages.GroupByDate "2006-01").Reverse }}
...
#### Providing the (alternate) direction
{{ range .Data.Pages.GroupByDate "2006-01" "asc" }}
...
{{ range .Data.Pages.GroupBy "Section" "desc" }}
...
### Ordering Pages within Group
Because Grouping returns a key and a slice of pages, all of the ordering methods listed above are available.
In this example I’ve ordered the groups in chronological order and the content
within each group in alphabetical order by title.
{{ range .Data.Pages.GroupByDate "2006-01" "asc" }}
{{ .Key }}
{{ end }}
## Filtering & Limiting Content
Sometimes you only want to list a subset of the available content. A common
request is to only display “Posts” on the homepage. Using the `where` function
you can do just that.
### First
`first` works like the `limit` keyword in SQL. It reduces the array to only the
first X elements. It takes the array and number of elements as input.
{{ range first 10 .Data.Pages }}
{{ .Render "summary"}}
{{ end }}
### Where
`where` works in a similar manner to the `where` keyword in SQL. It selects all
elements of the slice that match the provided field and value. It takes three
arguments 'array or slice of maps or structs', 'key or field name' and 'match
value'
{{ range where .Data.Pages "Section" "post" }}
{{ .Content}}
{{ end }}
### First & Where Together
Using both together can be very powerful.
{{ range first 5 (where .Data.Pages "Section" "post") }}
{{ .Content}}
{{ end }}
If `where` or `first` receives invalid input or a field name that doesn’t exist they will provide an error and stop site generation.
These are both template functions and work on not only
[lists](/templates/list/), but [taxonomies](/taxonomies/displaying/),
[terms](/templates/terms/) and [groups](/templates/list/).