e161ea09d Add one more Chinese file to workaround reflect: Zero(nil) b595b3a21 Add more Chinese translation 56e4e95d9 Use lang.Merge to "fill in the gaps" for untranslated pages ef079406c Merge commit '650fac3a4e7d256f4505402ab44cfc3c804b8dea' 650fac3a4 Squashed 'themes/gohugoioTheme/' changes from a1768ebb..f31a3dc8 322eff899 Add Chinese language for menus d90b886e0 Fix Markdown table syntax in previous commit 737f3dfca Update the leaf bundle vs branch bundle table 09fa1bc4e Clarify that `.Now` is obsolete 879ea3f6a Make release notes somewhat more consistent 0113e2051 Move 0.40.2-relnotes into content/en/news 77578f5bf Move content/ into new contentDir content/en/ 4dcf7c709 Fix "reflect: Zero(nil)" error in showcase 63dd25505 Release 0.40.2 2076c0d56 releaser: Prepare repository for 0.41-DEV 070fe565e releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.40.2 4ce52e913 releaser: Bump versions for release of 0.40.2 41907c487 Fix typos in syntax-highlighting.md 91753ef3d Add missing backtick b77274301 Remove duplicate release notes (0.27, 0.27.1, 0.35) 6e00da316 Remove obsolete content/release-notes/ directory 00a6d8c02 Change en dash back to `--` in 0.38.2-relnotes 51b32dc00 Update archetypes.md d0e5c2307 Release 0.40.1 4538a6d5b releaser: Prepare repository for 0.41-DEV 91b391d70 releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.40.1 e0979d143 releaser: Bump versions for release of 0.40.1 7983967c2 Clean images fe3fdd77d Polish showcase for Flesland Flis e6dde3989 Showcase - Flesland Flis AS by Absoluttweb 73aa62290 Revive @spf13's special Hugo font add67b335 Release Hugo 0.40 c0a26e5a6 Merge branch 'temp40' beeabaaae releaser: Prepare repository for 0.41-DEV e67d5e985 releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.40 6cdd95273 releaser: Bump versions for release of 0.40 bee21fb9b Revive the other Hugo logos too 4f45e8fe1 Fix the link type attribute for RSS in examples 8c67dc89a Fix example in delimit doc e7f6c00d5 Revive the logo used on the forum 82b0cd26e Merge commit 'a215abf70e018f4bf40d6c09d8bd148d8684b33d' 119c8ca58 Merge commit 'd2ec1a06df8ab6b17ad05cb008d5701b40327d47' db4683bd2 Improve .Get docs 05260b886 .Get function: fix syntax signature git-subtree-dir: docs git-subtree-split: e161ea09d33e3199f4998e4d2e9068d5a850f042
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title | linktitle | description | date | publishdate | lastmod | categories | keywords | menu | weight | sections_weight | draft | aliases | toc | ||||||||||||||||
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Data Templates | In addition to Hugo's built-in variables, you can specify your own custom data in templates or shortcodes that pull from both local and dynamic sources. | 2017-02-01 | 2017-02-01 | 2017-03-12 |
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Hugo supports loading data from YAML, JSON, and TOML files located in the data
directory in the root of your Hugo project.
{{< youtube FyPgSuwIMWQ >}}
The Data Folder
The data
folder is where you can store additional data for Hugo to use when generating your site. Data files aren't used to generate standalone pages; rather, they're meant to be supplemental to content files. This feature can extend the content in case your front matter fields grow out of control. Or perhaps you want to show a larger dataset in a template (see example below). In both cases, it's a good idea to outsource the data in their own files.
These files must be YAML, JSON, or TOML files (using the .yml
, .yaml
, .json
, or .toml
extension). The data will be accessible as a map
in the .Site.Data
variable.
Data Files in Themes
Data Files can also be used in Hugo themes but note that theme data files follow the same logic as other template files in the Hugo lookup order (i.e., given two files with the same name and relative path, the file in the root project data
directory will override the file in the themes/<THEME>/data
directory).
Therefore, theme authors should take care to not include data files that could be easily overwritten by a user who decides to customize a theme. For theme-specific data items that shouldn't be overridden, it can be wise to prefix the folder structure with a namespace; e.g. mytheme/data/<THEME>/somekey/...
. To check if any such duplicate exists, run hugo with the -v
flag.
The keys in the map created with data templates from data files will be a dot-chained set of path
, filename
, and key
in file (if applicable).
This is best explained with an example:
Example: Jaco Pastorius' Solo Discography
Jaco Pastorius was a great bass player, but his solo discography is short enough to use as an example. John Patitucci is another bass giant.
The example below is a bit contrived, but it illustrates the flexibility of data Files. This example uses TOML as its file format with the two following data files:
data/jazz/bass/jacopastorius.toml
data/jazz/bass/johnpatitucci.toml
jacopastorius.toml
contains the content below. johnpatitucci.toml
contains a similar list:
discography = [
"1974 – Modern American Music … Period! The Criteria Sessions",
"1974 – Jaco",
"1976 - Jaco Pastorius",
"1981 - Word of Mouth",
"1981 - The Birthday Concert (released in 1995)",
"1982 - Twins I & II (released in 1999)",
"1983 - Invitation",
"1986 - Broadway Blues (released in 1998)",
"1986 - Honestly Solo Live (released in 1990)",
"1986 - Live In Italy (released in 1991)",
"1986 - Heavy'n Jazz (released in 1992)",
"1991 - Live In New York City, Volumes 1-7.",
"1999 - Rare Collection (compilation)",
"2003 - Punk Jazz: The Jaco Pastorius Anthology (compilation)",
"2007 - The Essential Jaco Pastorius (compilation)"
]
The list of bass players can be accessed via .Site.Data.jazz.bass
, a single bass player by adding the filename without the suffix, e.g. .Site.Data.jazz.bass.jacopastorius
.
You can now render the list of recordings for all the bass players in a template:
{{ range $.Site.Data.jazz.bass }}
{{ partial "artist.html" . }}
{{ end }}
And then in the partials/artist.html
:
<ul>
{{ range .discography }}
<li>{{ . }}</li>
{{ end }}
</ul>
Discover a new favorite bass player? Just add another .toml
file in the same directory.
Example: Accessing Named Values in a Data File
Assume you have the following data structure in your User0123.[yml|toml|json]
data file located directly in data/
:
{{< code-toggle file="User0123" >}} Name: User0123 "Short Description": "He is a jolly good fellow." Achievements:
- "Can create a Key, Value list from Data File"
- "Learns Hugo"
- "Reads documentation" {{</ code-toggle >}}
You can use the following code to render the Short Description
in your layout::
<div>Short Description of {{.Site.Data.User0123.Name}}: <p>{{ index .Site.Data.User0123 "Short Description" | markdownify }}</p></div>
Note the use of the markdownify
template function. This will send the description through the Blackfriday Markdown rendering engine.
Data-Driven Content
In addition to the data files feature, Hugo also has a "data-driven content" feature, which lets you load any JSON or CSV file from nearly any resource.
Data-driven content currently consists of two functions, getJSON
and getCSV
, which are available in all template files.
Implementation details
Call the Functions with a URL
In your template, call the functions like this:
{{ $dataJ := getJSON "url" }}
{{ $dataC := getCSV "separator" "url" }}
If you use a prefix or postfix for the URL, the functions accept variadic arguments:
{{ $dataJ := getJSON "url prefix" "arg1" "arg2" "arg n" }}
{{ $dataC := getCSV "separator" "url prefix" "arg1" "arg2" "arg n" }}
The separator for getCSV
must be put in the first position and can only be one character long.
All passed arguments will be joined to the final URL:
{{ $urlPre := "https://api.github.com" }}
{{ $gistJ := getJSON $urlPre "/users/GITHUB_USERNAME/gists" }}
This will resolve internally to the following:
{{ $gistJ := getJSON "https://api.github.com/users/GITHUB_USERNAME/gists" }}
Finally, you can range over an array. This example will output the first 5 gists for a GitHub user:
<ul>
{{ $urlPre := "https://api.github.com" }}
{{ $gistJ := getJSON $urlPre "/users/GITHUB_USERNAME/gists" }}
{{ range first 5 $gistJ }}
{{ if .public }}
<li><a href="{{ .html_url }}" target="_blank">{{ .description }}</a></li>
{{ end }}
{{ end }}
</ul>
Example for CSV files
For getCSV
, the one-character-long separator must be placed in the first position followed by the URL. The following is an example of creating an HTML table in a partial template from a published CSV:
{{< code file="layouts/partials/get-csv.html" >}}
{{ $url := "http://a-big-corp.com/finance/employee-salaries.csv" }} {{ $sep := "," }} {{ range $i, $r := getCSV $sep $url }} {{ end }}Name | Position | Salary |
---|---|---|
{{ index $r 0 }} | {{ index $r 1 }} | {{ index $r 2 }} |
The expression {{index $r number}}
must be used to output the nth-column from the current row.
Cache URLs
Each downloaded URL will be cached in the default folder $TMPDIR/hugo_cache/
. The variable $TMPDIR
will be resolved to your system-dependent temporary directory.
With the command-line flag --cacheDir
, you can specify any folder on your system as a caching directory.
You can also set cacheDir
in the main configuration file.
If you don't like caching at all, you can fully disable caching with the command line flag --ignoreCache
.
Authentication When Using REST URLs
Currently, you can only use those authentication methods that can be put into an URL. OAuth and other authentication methods are not implemented.
Load Local files
To load local files with getJSON
and getCSV
, the source files must reside within Hugo's working directory. The file extension does not matter, but the content does.
It applies the same output logic as above in Calling the Functions with a URL.
{{% note %}}
The local CSV files to be loaded using getCSV
must be located outside of the data
directory.
{{% /note %}}
LiveReload with Data Files
There is no chance to trigger a LiveReload when the content of a URL changes. However, when a local file changes (i.e., data/*
and themes/<THEME>/data/*
), a LiveReload will be triggered. Symlinks are not supported. Note too that because downloading of data takes a while, Hugo stops processing your Markdown files until the data download has completed.
{{% warning "URL Data and LiveReload" %}}
If you change any local file and the LiveReload is triggered, Hugo will read the data-driven (URL) content from the cache. If you have disabled the cache (i.e., by running the server with hugo server --ignoreCache
), Hugo will re-download the content every time LiveReload triggers. This can create huge traffic. You may reach API limits quickly.
{{% /warning %}}
Examples of Data-driven Content
- Photo gallery JSON powered: https://github.com/pcdummy/hugo-lightslider-example
- GitHub Starred Repositories in a post using data-driven content in a custom short code.