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109 lines
3.1 KiB
Markdown
109 lines
3.1 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: page
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description: Provides global access to the .Page object.
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categories: [functions]
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keywords: []
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menu:
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docs:
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parent: functions
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function:
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aliases: []
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returnType:
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signatures: [page]
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relatedFunctions:
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- hugo
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- page
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- site
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aliases: [/functions/page]
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---
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At the top level of a template that receives the `Page` object in context, these are equivalent:
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```go-html-template
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{{ .Params.foo }}
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{{ .Page.Params.foo }}
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{{ page.Params.foo }}
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```
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When the `Page` object is not in context, you can use the global `page` function:
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```go-html-template
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{{ page.Params.foo }}
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```
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{{% note %}}
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Do not use the global `page` function in shortcodes, partials called by shortcodes, or cached partials. See [warnings](#warnings) below.
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{{% /note %}}
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## Explanation
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Hugo almost always passes a `Page` as the data context into the top level template (e.g., `single.html`). The one exception is the multihost sitemap template. This means that you can access the current page with the `.` variable in the template.
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But when you are deeply nested inside of a [content view], [partial], or [render hook], it isn't always practical or possible to access the `Page` object.
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Use the global `page` function to access the `Page` object from anywhere in any template.
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## Warnings
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### Be aware of top-level context
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The global `page` function accesses the `Page` object passed into the top-level template.
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With this content structure:
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```text
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content/
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├── posts/
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│ ├── post-1.md
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│ ├── post-2.md
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│ └── post-3.md
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└── _index.md <-- title is "My Home Page"
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```
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And this code in the home page template:
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```go-html-template
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{{ range site.Sections }}
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{{ range .Pages }}
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{{ page.Title }}
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{{ end }}
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{{ end }}
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```
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The rendered output will be:
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```text
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My Home Page
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My Home Page
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My Home Page
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```
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In the example above, the global `page` function accesses the `Page` object passed into the home page template; it does not access the `Page` object of the iterated pages.
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### Be aware of caching
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Do not use the global `page` function in:
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- Shortcodes
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- Partials called by shortcodes
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- Partials cached by the `partialCached` function
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Hugo caches rendered shortcodes. If you use the `global` page function within a shortcode, and the page content is rendered in two or more templates, the cached shortcodes may be incorrect.
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Consider this section template:
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```go-html-template
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{{ range .Pages }}
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<h2><a href="{{ .RelPermalink }}">{{ .LinkTitle }}</a></h2>
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{{ .Summary }}
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{{ end }}
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```
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When you call the `.Summary` method, Hugo renders the page `.Content` including shortcodes. In this case, within a shortcode, the global `page` function accesses the `Page` object of the section page, not the content page.
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If Hugo renders the section page before a content page, the cached rendered shortcode will be incorrect. You cannot control the rendering sequence due to concurrency.
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[content view]: /getting-started/glossary/#content-view
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[partial]: /getting-started/glossary/#partial
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[render hook]: /getting-started/glossary/#render-hook
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[shortcode]: getting-started/glossary/#shortcode
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