hugo/content/content-management/taxonomies.md
Bjørn Erik Pedersen 05e42bc643 Squashed 'docs/' changes from e65df1059..a042b67b5
a042b67b5 Update installation instructions for Fedora, CentOS, Red Hat
e99dcb0b5 Document `:sections` placeholder for permalinks
f33c88a27 Fix and clarify documentation about Blackfriday extensions (mask)
5cab109c2 Add .Page.File documentation
62df7bb80 Add .Page.CurrentSection and .Page.Sections documentation
60b4414de Add .Page.Dir documentation
22038d1a8 shortcode-templates.md: Update year example
850d5ca41 Add note about theme versions in hosting-on-netlify.md
0509b8055 Update permalink example URL
c68d61d3a Mention the available 'width' argument in 'figure' shortcode
ed83b483a Update Nanobox deployment tutorial
a7422f35d shortcode-templates.md: Remove stray period
af2905fe4 Fix order of releases in news section
19d3ea064 Bump to 0.30.2
bbfa10343 Merge branch 'next'
36ed7cbe4 releaser: Prepare repository for 0.31-DEV
f689770f6 releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.30.2
0045e712a releaser: Bump versions for release of 0.30.2
a9efc3bbd Add slug to 0.30.1 relnotes
9cf47a4a1 Release 0.30.1
1fa0bb23d releaser: Prepare repository for 0.31-DEV
5582208b6 releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.30.1
09693d155 releaser: Bump versions for release of 0.30.1
58adf5d0d Merge commit '325009c3fd4ac90021897b7e3e025c14e70ce162'
4ef5dcb9b releaser: Prepare repository for 0.31-DEV
02938a788 releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.30.1
7cfd01fc6 releaser: Bump versions for release of 0.30.1
db3a68e24 Fix typo
95a5d8b46 Fix format of summaryLength in TOML example config
2ad649a92 Make terms in taxonomy examples more coherent
1fac1e662 Make a link specifically point to Pygments HTML Formatter docs
11ae6be03 Fix minor typos in v0.30 release notes

git-subtree-dir: docs
git-subtree-split: a042b67b5b8834ee8292849708cba724f5d6644e
2017-11-17 13:46:40 +01:00

9.1 KiB

title linktitle description date publishdate lastmod keywords categories menu weight draft aliases toc
Taxonomies Hugo includes support for user-defined taxonomies to help you demonstrate logical relationships between content for the end users of your website. 2017-02-01 2017-02-01 2017-02-01
taxonomies
metadata
front matter
terms
content management
docs
parent weight
content-management 80
80 false
/taxonomies/overview/
/taxonomies/usage/
/indexes/overview/
/doc/indexes/
/extras/indexes
true

What is a Taxonomy?

Hugo includes support for user-defined groupings of content called taxonomies. Taxonomies are classifications of logical relationships between content.

Definitions

Taxonomy
a categorization that can be used to classify content
Term
a key within the taxonomy
Value
a piece of content assigned to a term

{{< youtube pCPCQgqC8RA >}}

Example Taxonomy: Movie Website

Let's assume you are making a website about movies. You may want to include the following taxonomies:

  • Actors
  • Directors
  • Studios
  • Genre
  • Year
  • Awards

Then, in each of the movies, you would specify terms for each of these taxonomies (i.e., in the front matter of each of your movie content files). From these terms, Hugo would automatically create pages for each Actor, Director, Studio, Genre, Year, and Award, with each listing all of the Movies that matched that specific Actor, Director, Studio, Genre, Year, and Award.

Movie Taxonomy Organization

To continue with the example of a movie site, the following demonstrates content relationships from the perspective of the taxonomy:

Actor                    <- Taxonomy
    Bruce Willis         <- Term
        The Sixth Sense  <- Value
        Unbreakable      <- Value
        Moonrise Kingdom <- Value
    Samuel L. Jackson    <- Term
        Unbreakable      <- Value
        The Avengers     <- Value
        xXx              <- Value

From the perspective of the content, the relationships would appear differently, although the data and labels used are the same:

Unbreakable                 <- Value
    Actors                  <- Taxonomy
        Bruce Willis        <- Term
        Samuel L. Jackson   <- Term
    Director                <- Taxonomy
        M. Night Shyamalan  <- Term
    ...
Moonrise Kingdom            <- Value
    Actors                  <- Taxonomy
        Bruce Willis        <- Term
        Bill Murray         <- Term
    Director                <- Taxonomy
        Wes Anderson        <- Term
    ...

Hugo Taxonomy Defaults

Hugo natively supports taxonomies.

Without adding a single line to your site's configuration file, Hugo will automatically create taxonomies for tags and categories. If you do not want Hugo to create any taxonomies, set disableKinds in your site's configuration to the following:

disableKinds = ["taxonomy","taxonomyTerm"]

Default Destinations

When taxonomies are used---and taxonomy templates are provided---Hugo will automatically create both a page listing all the taxonomy's terms and individual pages with lists of content associated with each term. For example, a categories taxonomy declared in your configuration and used in your content front matter will create the following pages:

Configure Taxonomies

Taxonomies must be defined in your website configuration before they can be used throughout the site. You need to provide both the plural and singular labels for each taxonomy. For example, singular key = "plural value" for TOML and singular key: "plural value" for YAML.

Example: TOML Taxonomy Configuration

[taxonomies]
  tag = "tags"
  category = "categories"
  series = "series"

Example: YAML Taxonomy Configuration

taxonomies:
  tag: "tags"
  category: "categories"
  series: "series"

Preserve Taxonomy Values

By default, taxonomy names are normalized.

Therefore, if you want to have a taxonomy term with special characters such as Gérard Depardieu instead of Gerard Depardieu, set the value for preserveTaxonomyNames to true in your site configuration. Hugo will then preserve special characters in taxonomy values but will still title-ize the values for titles and normalize them in URLs.

Note that if you use preserveTaxonomyNames and intend to manually construct URLs to the archive pages, you will need to pass the taxonomy values through the urlize template function.

{{% note %}} You can add content and front matter to your taxonomy list and taxonomy terms pages. See Content Organization for more information on how to add an _index.md for this purpose.

Note also that taxonomy permalinks are not configurable. {{% /note %}}

Add Taxonomies to Content

Once a taxonomy is defined at the site level, any piece of content can be assigned to it, regardless of content type or content section.

Assigning content to a taxonomy is done in the front matter. Simply create a variable with the plural name of the taxonomy and assign all terms you want to apply to the instance of the content type.

{{% note %}} If you would like the ability to quickly generate content files with preconfigured taxonomies or terms, read the docs on Hugo archetypes. {{% /note %}}

Example: TOML Front Matter with Taxonomies

+++
title = "Hugo: A fast and flexible static site generator"
tags = [ "Development", "Go", "fast", "Blogging" ]
categories = [ "Development" ]
series = [ "Go Web Dev" ]
slug = "hugo"
project_url = "https://github.com/gohugoio/hugo"
+++

Example: YAML Front Matter with Taxonomies

---
title: "Hugo: A fast and flexible static site generator"
tags: ["Development", "Go", "fast", "Blogging"]
categories: ["Development"]
series: ["Go Web Dev"]
slug: "hugo"
project_url: "https://github.com/gohugoio/hugo"
---

Example: JSON Front Matter with Taxonomies

{
    "title": "Hugo: A fast and flexible static site generator",
    "tags": [
        "Development",
        "Go",
        "fast",
        "Blogging"
    ],
    "categories" : [
        "Development"
    ],
    "series" : [
        "Go Web Dev"
    ],
    "slug": "hugo",
    "project_url": "https://github.com/gohugoio/hugo"
}

Order Taxonomies

A content file can assign weight for each of its associate taxonomies. Taxonomic weight can be used for sorting or ordering content in taxonomy list templates and is declared in a content file's front matter. The convention for declaring taxonomic weight is taxonomyname_weight.

The following TOML and YAML examples show a piece of content that has a weight of 22, which can be used for ordering purposes when rendering the pages assigned to the "a", "b" and "c" values of the tags taxonomy. It has also been assigned the weight of 44 when rendering the "d" category page.

Example: TOML Taxonomic weight

+++
title = "foo"
tags = [ "a", "b", "c" ]
tags_weight = 22
categories = ["d"]
categories_weight = 44
+++

Example: YAML Taxonomic weight

---
title: foo
tags: [ "a", "b", "c" ]
tags_weight: 22
categories: ["d"]
categories_weight: 44
---

By using taxonomic weight, the same piece of content can appear in different positions in different taxonomies.

{{% note "Limits to Ordering Taxonomies" %}} Currently taxonomies only support the default weight => date ordering of list content. For more information, see the documentation on taxonomy templates. {{% /note %}}

Add custom metadata to a Taxonomy Term

If you need to add custom metadata to your taxonomy terms, you will need to create a page for that term at /content/<TAXONOMY>/<TERM>/_index.md and add your metadata in it's front matter. Continuing with our 'Actors' example, let's say you want to add a wikipedia page link to each actor. Your terms pages would be something like this:

{{< code file="/content/actors/bruce-willis/_index.md" >}}

title: "Bruce Willis" wikipedia: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce_Willis"

{{< /code >}}

You can later use your custom metadata as shown in the Taxonomy Terms Templates documentation.