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title linktitle description godocref date publishdate lastmod categories menu keywords signature workson hugoversion relatedfuncs deprecated aliases needsexample
index index Looks up the index(es) or key(s) of the data structure passed into it. https://golang.org/pkg/text/template/#hdr-Functions 2017-02-01 2017-02-01 2017-02-01
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index COLLECTION INDEX
index COLLECTION KEY
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From the Godocs:

Returns the result of indexing its first argument by the following arguments. Thus "index x 1 2 3" is, in Go syntax, x[1][2][3]. Each indexed item must be a map, slice, or array.

In Go templates, you can't access array, slice, or map elements directly the same way you would in Go. For example, $.Site.Data.authors[.Params.authorkey] isn't supported syntax.

Instead, you have to use index, a function that handles the lookup for you.

Example: Load Data from a Path Based on Front Matter Params

Assume you want to add a location = "" field to your front matter for every article written in content/vacations/. You want to use this field to populate information about the location at the bottom of the article in your single.html template. You also have a directory in data/locations/ that looks like the following:

.
└── data
    └── locations
        ├── abilene.toml
        ├── chicago.toml
        ├── oslo.toml
        └── provo.toml

Here is an example of the data inside data/locations/oslo.toml:

website = "https://www.oslo.kommune.no"
pop_city = 658390
pop_metro = 1717900

The example we will use will be an article on Oslo, whose front matter should be set to exactly the same name as the corresponding file name in data/locations/:

title = "My Norwegian Vacation"
location = "oslo"

The content of oslo.toml can be accessed from your template using the following node path: .Site.Data.locations.oslo. However, the specific file you need is going to change according to the front matter.

This is where the index function is needed. index takes 2 parameters in this use case:

  1. The node path
  2. A string corresponding to the desired data; e.g.—
{{ index .Site.Data.locations “oslo” }}

The variable for .Params.location is a string and can therefore replace oslo in the example above:

{{ index .Site.Data.locations .Params.location }}
=> map[website:https://www.oslo.kommune.no pop_city:658390 pop_metro:1717900]

Now the call will return the specific file according to the location specified in the content's front matter, but you will likely want to write specific properties to the template. You can do this by continuing down the node path via dot notation (.):

{{ (index .Site.Data.locations .Params.location).pop_city }}
=> 658390