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Content formats | Create your content using Markdown, HTML, Emacs Org Mode, AsciiDoc, Pandoc, or reStructuredText. |
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Introduction
You may mix content formats throughout your site. For example:
content/
└── posts/
├── post-1.md
├── post-2.adoc
├── post-3.org
├── post-4.pandoc
├── post-5.rst
└── post-6.html
Regardless of content format, all content must have front matter, preferably including both title
and date
.
Hugo selects the content renderer based on the markup
identifier in front matter, falling back to the file extension. See the classification table below for a list of markup identifiers and recognized file extensions.
Formats
Markdown
Create your content in Markdown preceded by front matter.
Markdown is Hugo's default content format. Hugo natively renders Markdown to HTML using Goldmark. Goldmark is fast and conforms to the CommonMark and GitHub Flavored Markdown specifications. You can configure Goldmark in your site configuration.
Hugo provides custom Markdown features including:
- Attributes
- Apply HTML attributes such as
class
andid
to Markdown images and block elements including blockquotes, fenced code blocks, headings, horizontal rules, lists, paragraphs, and tables. - Extensions
- Leverage the embedded Markdown extensions to create tables, definition lists, footnotes, task lists, inserted text, mark text, subscripts, superscripts, and more.
- Mathematics
- Include mathematical equations and expressions in Markdown using LaTeX or TeX typesetting syntax.
- Render hooks
- Override the conversion of Markdown to HTML when rendering fenced code blocks, headings, images, and links. For example, render every standalone image as an HTML
figure
element.
HTML
Create your content in HTML preceded by front matter. The content is typically what you would place within an HTML document's body
or main
element.
Emacs Org Mode
Create your content in the Emacs Org Mode format preceded by front matter. You can use Org Mode keywords for front matter. See details).
AsciiDoc
Create your content in the AsciiDoc format preceded by front matter. Hugo renders AsciiDoc content to HTML using the Asciidoctor executable. You must install Asciidoctor and its dependencies (Ruby) to use the AsciiDoc content format.
You can configure the AsciiDoc renderer in your site configuration.
In its default configuration, Hugo passes these CLI flags when calling the Asciidoctor executable:
--no-header-footer
The CLI flags passed to the Asciidoctor executable depend on configuration. You may inspect the flags when building your site:
hugo --logLevel info
Pandoc
Create your content in the Pandoc format preceded by front matter. Hugo renders Pandoc content to HTML using the Pandoc executable. You must install Pandoc to use the Pandoc content format.
Hugo passes these CLI flags when calling the Pandoc executable:
--mathjax
reStructuredText
Create your content in the reStructuredText format preceded by front matter. Hugo renders reStructuredText content to HTML using Docutils, specifically rst2html. You must install Docutils and its dependencies (Python) to use the reStructuredText content format.
Hugo passes these CLI flags when calling the rst2html executable:
--leave-comments --initial-header-level=2
Classification
Content format | Media type | Identifier | File extensions |
---|---|---|---|
Markdown | text/markdown |
markdown |
markdown ,md , mdown |
HTML | text/html |
html |
htm , html |
Emacs Org Mode | text/org |
org |
org |
AsciiDoc | text/asciidoc |
asciidoc |
ad , adoc , asciidoc |
Pandoc | text/pandoc |
pandoc |
pandoc , pdc |
reStructuredText | text/rst |
rst |
rst |
When converting content to HTML, Hugo uses:
- Native renderers for Markdown, HTML, and Emacs Org mode
- External renderers for AsciiDoc, Pandoc, and reStructuredText
Native renderers are faster than external renderers.