Updates #2297
1.5 KiB
aliases | lastmod | date | linktitle | menu | prev | title | weight | ||||||
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2015-05-25 | 2015-05-22 | Debugging |
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/templates/404 | Template Debugging | 110 |
Template Debugging
Here are some snippets you can add to your template to answer some common questions.
These snippets use the printf
function available in all Go templates. This function is
an alias to the Go function, fmt.Printf.
What variables are available in this context?
You can use the template syntax, $.
, to get the top-level template context
from anywhere in your template. This will print out all the values under, .Site
.
{{ printf "%#v" $.Site }}
This will print out the value of .Permalink
:
{{ printf "%#v" .Permalink }}
This will print out a list of all the variables scoped to the current context
(a.k.a. The dot, ".
").
{{ printf "%#v" . }}
When writing a Homepage, what does one of the pages you're looping through look like?
{{ range .Data.Pages }}
{{/* The context, ".", is now a Page */}}
{{ printf "%#v" . }}
{{ end }}
Why do I have no variables defined?
Check that you are passing variables in the partial
function. For example
{{ partial "header" }}
will render the header partial, but the header partial will not have access to any variables. You need to pass variables explicitly. For example:
{{ partial "header" . }}