1dc05a16b Update index.md d73a9b3b4 Added StackImpact showcase b0e82b3a5 Fix uglyURLs example cf8a93728 GA track outgoing sponsor clikcs aca59ac66 Move the sponsor banners up a little 5571673f0 Migrate from analytics.js to gtag.js 64a29b6cb Update faq.md 84704aa84 Use GOPATH variable if defined in installation from source 5f70e6ee2 Remove disableRSS etc. from the documentation 4945e7937 Remove superflous asterisks 39f6c9c28 showcase: Add 1password.com fe0f82610 Add GitLab warning 9f26f21d2 Fix URL typo 83a91fc99 Remove duplicate release notes 133cdd313 Release 0.36.1 fbe2a2dc7 Clean images 1b02f9193 Merge branch 'temp361' c430d2d58 Merge branch 'release-0.36.1' dd7370fc4 releaser: Prepare repository for 0.37-DEV 72534f9ec releaser: Add release notes to /docs for release of 0.36.1 845b2cacb releaser: Bump versions for release of 0.36.1 78790fcb1 Add fluid type to showcase details box 4ef59e008 Adjust column widths to handle a wider variety of copy width 6d2e68521 Always show the latest showcase item on front page 665b1eb5e showcase: Shuffle the news items 5fef1f9b7 Escape quote d680f0c16 Add some quotes 1722f0d5a showcase: Make the description more about Hugo a9d43db0a Add Quiply Employee Communications App 7aaa464ec Add Quiply Employee Communications App fad6a25dd maintenance: Show last 30 7afcfdced showcase: Set Linode date to today 0c31f481a New showcase for Linode 6c7687c2d Minor edits to the `apply` documentation 04bbff8b3 Update apply.md f543032e3 Fix clunky sentence 218ba2a65 Some more Netlify improvements 0bd512125 Improve the Netlify versioning docs 7a708d60e Clarify Netlify's Hugo versions handling 8f86342cd Add some space d68d4ff37 Remove now superflous warning bf93a46ea maintenance: Add TODO list 3b5f27835 maintenance: Remove a superflous prefix 8f29ba2fb maintenance: Adjust order 105d53610 maintenance: Add TOC 29e86396b maintenance: Fix page list selection ba51fe66d Finish the Maintenance section e9b0c710c Add latest changes in new spotlight section 8ccd79f61 Fix broken sentence c77643c37 Spelling 919f2faef Remove some old troubleshooting articles 09e467f06 Add a new FAQ ac2b25bb5 Hartwell showcase typos 5bf766993 Trim "www." from shocase URLs in title a180cd5cb Make the inline showcase template names unique 6886982fd Merge commit '9cc9bab46288d8d5f9fda7009c5f746258cec1b4' 09728efbf Add "target" and "rel" parameters to figure shortcode git-subtree-dir: docs git-subtree-split: 1dc05a16bd6b99809d97daeda743d914297f908c
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Create Your Own Shortcodes | Shortcode Templates | You can extend Hugo's built-in shortcodes by creating your own using the same templating syntax as that for single and list pages. | 2017-02-01 | 2017-02-01 | 2017-02-01 |
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Shortcodes are a means to consolidate templating into small, reusable snippets that you can embed directly inside of your content. In this sense, you can think of shortcodes as the intermediary between page and list templates and basic content files.
{{% note %}} Hugo also ships with built-in shortcodes for common use cases. (See Content Management: Shortcodes.) {{% /note %}}
Create Custom Shortcodes
Hugo's built-in shortcodes cover many common, but not all, use cases. Luckily, Hugo provides the ability to easily create custom shortcodes to meet your website's needs.
{{< youtube Eu4zSaKOY4A >}}
File Placement
To create a shortcode, place an HTML template in the layouts/shortcodes
directory of your source organization. Consider the file name carefully since the shortcode name will mirror that of the file but without the .html
extension. For example, layouts/shortcodes/myshortcode.html
will be called with either {{</* myshortcode /*/>}}
or {{%/* myshortcode /*/%}}
depending on the type of parameters you choose.
Shortcode Template Lookup Order
Shortcode templates have a simple lookup order:
/layouts/shortcodes/<SHORTCODE>.html
/themes/<THEME>/layouts/shortcodes/<SHORTCODE>.html
Positional vs Named Parameters
You can create shortcodes using the following types of parameters:
- Positional parameters
- Named parameters
- Positional or named parameters (i.e, "flexible")
In shortcodes with positional parameters, the order of the parameters is important. If a shortcode has a single required value (e.g., the youtube
shortcode below), positional parameters work very well and require less typing from content authors.
For more complex layouts with multiple or optional parameters, named parameters work best. While less terse, named parameters require less memorization from a content author and can be added in a shortcode declaration in any order.
Allowing both types of parameters (i.e., a "flexible" shortcode) is useful for complex layouts where you want to set default values that can be easily overridden by users.
Access Parameters
All shortcode parameters can be accessed via the .Get
method. Whether you pass a key (i.e., string) or a number to the .Get
method depends on whether you are accessing a named or positional parameter, respectively.
To access a parameter by name, use the .Get
method followed by the named parameter as a quoted string:
{{ .Get "class" }}
To access a parameter by position, use the .Get
followed by a numeric position, keeping in mind that positional parameters are zero-indexed:
{{ .Get 0 }}
with
is great when the output depends on a parameter being set:
{{ with .Get "class"}} class="{{.}}"{{ end }}
.Get
can also be used to check if a parameter has been provided. This is
most helpful when the condition depends on either of the values, or both:
{{ or .Get "title" | .Get "alt" | if }} alt="{{ with .Get "alt"}}{{.}}{{else}}{{.Get "title"}}{{end}}"{{ end }}
.Inner
If a closing shortcode is used, the .Inner
variable will be populated with all of the content between the opening and closing shortcodes. If a closing shortcode is required, you can check the length of .Inner
as an indicator of its existence.
A shortcode with content declared via the .Inner
variable can also be declared without the inline content and without the closing shortcode by using the self-closing syntax:
{{</* innershortcode /*/>}}
.Params
The .Params
variable in shortcodes contains the list parameters passed to shortcode for more complicated use cases. You can also access higher-scoped parameters with the following logic:
$.Params
- these are the parameters passed directly into the shortcode declaration (e.g., a YouTube video ID)
$.Page.Params
- refers to the page's params; the "page" in this case refers to the content file in which the shortcode is declared (e.g., a
shortcode_color
field in a content's front matter could be accessed via$.Page.Params.shortcode_color
). $.Page.Site.Params
- refers to global variables as defined in your site's configuration file.
.IsNamedParams
The .IsNamedParams
variable checks whether the shortcode declaration uses named parameters and returns a boolean value.
For example, you could create an image
shortcode that can take either a src
named parameter or the first positional parameter, depending on the preference of the content's author. Let's assume the image
shortcode is called as follows:
{{</* image src="images/my-image.jpg"*/>}}
You could then include the following as part of your shortcode templating:
{{ if .IsNamedParams }}
<img src="{{.Get "src" }}" alt="">
{{ else }}
<img src="{{.Get 0}}" alt="">
{{ end }}
See the example Vimeo shortcode below for .IsNamedParams
in action.
{{% warning %}}
While you can create shortcode templates that accept both positional and named parameters, you cannot declare shortcodes in content with a mix of parameter types. Therefore, a shortcode declared like {{</* image src="images/my-image.jpg" "This is my alt text" */>}}
will return an error.
{{% /warning %}}
You can also use the variable .Page
to access all the normal page variables.
A shortcodes can also be nested. In a nested shortcode, you can access the parent shortcode context with .Parent
variable. This can be very useful for inheritance of common shortcode parameters from the root.
Checking for Existence
You can check if a specific shortcode is used on a page by calling .HasShortcode
in that page template, providing the name of the shortcode. This is sometimes useful when you want to include specific scripts or styles in the header that are only used by that shortcode.
Custom Shortcode Examples
The following are examples of the different types of shortcodes you can create via shortcode template files in /layouts/shortcodes
.
Single-word Example: year
Let's assume you would like to keep mentions of your copyright year current in your content files without having to continually review your markdown. Your goal is to be able to call the shortcode as follows:
{{</* year */>}}
{{< code file="/layouts/shortcodes/year.html" >}} {{ now.Format "2006" }} {{< /code >}}
Single Positional Example: youtube
Embedded videos are a common addition to markdown content that can quickly become unsightly. The following is the code used by Hugo's built-in YouTube shortcode:
{{</* youtube 09jf3ow9jfw */>}}
Would load the template at /layouts/shortcodes/youtube.html
:
{{< code file="/layouts/shortcodes/youtube.html" >}}
{{< code file="youtube-embed.html" copy="false" >}}
Single Named Example: image
Let's say you want to create your own img
shortcode rather than use Hugo's built-in figure
shortcode. Your goal is to be able to call the shortcode as follows in your content files:
{{< code file="content-image.md" >}} {{</* img src="/media/spf13.jpg" title="Steve Francia" */>}} {{< /code >}}
You have created the shortcode at /layouts/shortcodes/img.html
, which loads the following shortcode template:
{{< code file="/layouts/shortcodes/img.html" >}}
{{< /code >}}Would be rendered as:
{{< code file="img-output.html" copy="false" >}}
{{< /code >}}Single Flexible Example: vimeo
{{</* vimeo 49718712 */>}}
{{</* vimeo id="49718712" class="flex-video" */>}}
Would load the template found at /layouts/shortcodes/vimeo.html
:
{{< code file="/layouts/shortcodes/vimeo.html" >}} {{ if .IsNamedParams }}
Would be rendered as:
{{< code file="vimeo-iframes.html" copy="false" >}}
Paired Example: highlight
The following is taken from highlight
, which is a built-in shortcode that ships with Hugo.
{{< code file="highlight-example.md" >}} {{</* highlight html */>}}
<html> This HTML </html> {{}} {{< /code >}}The template for the highlight
shortcode uses the following code, which is already included in Hugo:
{{ .Get 0 | highlight .Inner }}
The rendered output of the HTML example code block will be as follows:
{{< code file="syntax-highlighted.html" copy="false" >}}
<html> <body> This HTML </body> </html>
{{% note %}}
The preceding shortcode makes use of a Hugo-specific template function called highlight
, which uses Pygments to add syntax highlighting to the example HTML code block. See the developer tools page on syntax highlighting for more information.
{{% /note %}}
Nested Shortcode: Image Gallery
Hugo's .Parent
shortcode variable returns a boolean value depending on whether the shortcode in question is called within the context of a parent shortcode. This provides an inheritance model for common shortcode parameters.
The following example is contrived but demonstrates the concept. Assume you have a gallery
shortcode that expects one named class
parameter:
{{< code file="layouts/shortcodes/gallery.html" >}}
You also have an image
shortcode with a single named src
parameter that you want to call inside of gallery
and other shortcodes so that the parent defines the context of each image
:
{{< code file="layouts/shortcodes/image.html" >}} {{- $src := .Get "src" -}} {{- with .Parent -}} <img src="{{$src}}" class="{{.Get "class"}}-image"> {{- else -}} {{- end }} {{< /code >}}
You can then call your shortcode in your content as follows:
{{</* gallery class="content-gallery" */>}}
{{</* img src="/images/one.jpg" */>}}
{{</* img src="/images/two.jpg" */>}}
{{</* /gallery */>}}
{{</* img src="/images/three.jpg" */>}}
This will output the following HTML. Note how the first two image
shortcodes inherit the class
value of content-gallery
set with the call to the parent gallery
, whereas the third image
only uses src
:
<div class="content-gallery">
<img src="/images/one.jpg" class="content-gallery-image">
<img src="/images/two.jpg" class="content-gallery-image">
</div>
<img src="/images/three.jpg">
More Shortcode Examples
More shortcode examples can be found in the shortcodes directory for spf13.com and the shortcodes directory for the Hugo docs.