39af43ef1 Update postprocess.md 3ec192d08 Update multilingual.md 7fc7bf862 Add a note about some changes in 0.112.0 742510ae8 Fix ordinal abbrev example fe557031a Correct spelling for 'GitHub' and 'GitLab' (#2082) 84a059b9a Fix typo in hosting-on-azure.md (#2080) 3383786fe Add i18n to list of directories affected by ignoreFiles 5bfb95234 Update 404.md (#2076) 87545a4fd Update hosting-on-cloudflare-pages.md (#2078) aa5952c28 Add default module mount to example (#2075) ced5292c8 Align permalinks examples (#2073) 77b5009fd Fix typo c79319a6a Clarify description of baseURL e93a9807b Fix typo in frontmatter description (#2071) 05fe9163a Remove erroneous statement aa59ef383 docs: Remove note about hugo server not using 404 (#2068) 4a387a6b8 Clarify findRESubmatch (#2065) 47a9181b5 Clarify findRE, replaceRE, and findRESubmatch (#2064) e5eedbb5e Update theme 5d392c3d4 Clarify pageRef menu property (#2059) a557b0ebf Fix typos on Configure Hugo page (#2058) 17ef283e6 Clarify module.replacements wording (#2052) 5db4aa421 Fixing broken links (#2057) 9afa0c2fa Fix broken links (#2055) 49b981b1f Correct repo URL for migration tool (contentful.com) (#2056) 969c24c16 Remove duplicate content 0b91e7676 Revert "Delete duplicate content" 3229e79f2 Delete duplicate content ec4eddb98 Fix typo 6509159d5 Describe snap package strict confinement (#2050) 1589bcdb7 Remove hugo.Generator admonition (#2048) 7e553d11b Add example 48bec0335 Replace blockquotes with admonitions where appropriate (#2043) 98226fe61 Remove orphaned param fron admonition calls (#2042) 2a37a1d21 Clarify cast functions (#2041) 03fd1d404 Fix typo 1898013ef Fix typos 944e27430 Replace output shortcode calls 0c66fb055 Add example of shortcode calls within sample code f25a79c69 Replace tip and warning shortcode calls 3afac22fc Refactor code shortcode ad65d2931 Clarify seq function 59f8a1f48 Clarify title function 47535dc87 Cleanup hasPrefix hasSuffix 7bee3e4c1 Cleanup action delimiters cc96070f0 Correct functions archetype ffe5d39b9 Remove duplicate shortcodes 075c9f3fe Remove old todos bc3ec033c Front matter cleanup (#2039) 928b94505 Add code fence types (#2038) 856fa293c Document .File.Filename (#2037) 0988c4a42 Update output-formats.md (#2036) 289da5658 Change findRe to findRE 1e50f0583 Update theme f90fb1bf5 Improve type formatting (#2032) 7785fa7d9 Use code-toggle shortcode where appropriate f11cabf37 Add space after and before action delimiters ac333c795 Replace erroneous use of nocopy shortcode param 064896c06 Use bool param when calling code-toggle fb33bf59b Update code-toggle shortcode 6ddeab4f8 Add missing go-html-template code fence type (#2030) 1bba4cefb Fix links (#2029) 77f4d6c32 Link destination cleanup (#2028) fc0ecc027 Improve breadcrumb example (#2026) 6148be2de Update the breadcrumb navigation example (#2025) 6ebb37b1b Clarify sort function (#2024) 31269bad9 Add Winget installation method (#1988) d6c5f940e Resource methods: add signatures, minor improvements (#2017) d2e594cbc Modify inner variable shortcode-template explanation (#1985) a54927a7f Update GitHub Pages starter workflow (#2023) 2964c2d44 Remove orphaned static files (#2022) 97e5567cc Complete documentation on '.Scratch' and '.Store' (#2016) fa7b2e299 Fix typo bdce77c57 Remove literal from example menu template c0f23b216 Correct and improve menu documentation (#2010) 464368fd9 Document .Page.Store (#2011) a3d7c4a3a Improve urls.Parse function (#2012) d2cec3776 Clarify postcss config option (#2013) eb3003fef Fixed typo (#2007) 90c82d7ea Clarify mermaid markdown example (#2004) 1b11dcd5c docs(Diagrams): Update mermaid import mechanism (#1967) 4aceb6855 Fingerprinting, asset management: minor improvements (#2003) bcbc519bb resources.GetRemote: minor improvement (#2002) d54185bef Clarify markdownify behavior (#1999) afb582a80 Clarify usage of slug in front matter (#1998) f71985315 Update hasSuffix.md 29ad622a3 netlify: Hugo 0.111.3 adf223ecc Merge branch 'tempv0.111.3' 06858c646 docs: Improve examples of variadic math functions 8b656994e tpl/math: Allow multi numbers in add, sub, mul, div, min and max 2a38c4046 tpl: Add hasSuffix alias 4e0b98d54 switch transfers to workers 11651ac0f customize parallel transfer count 142f5da81 Update GitHub hosting instructions (#1991) ad7901d2f netlify: Hugo 0.111.2 0651a76e0 add headings to distinguish render hook context params d96d75be4 netlify: Hugo 0.111.1 226cb9e3a Add a paragraph about the new page template function 4c0157a49 Add .Fragments docs 6c78c0679 netlify: Bump to Hugo 0.111.0 7b11c24cf Merge branch 'feat/related-fragments' 615d18ef8 Add Related fragments config a36449b0c cods: Regen docs helper 0272fa45f Merge commit '336622d5e7afd9334cd2de7150d4f16bdf7c24f9' c5a962b93 related: Add config option cardinalityThreshold f91677377 docs: Another fix related docs example 17aa939ea docs: Fix related docs example 12c449150 Merge commit 'cf591b7c0c598d34896709db6d28598da37e3ff6' cb998b3d6 Add page fragments support to Related git-subtree-dir: 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Introduction to Hugo Templating | Templating | Hugo uses Go's `html/template` and `text/template` libraries as the basis for the templating. |
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{{% note %}} The following is only a primer on Go Templates. For an in-depth look into Go Templates, check the official Go docs. {{% /note %}}
Go Templates provide an extremely simple template language that adheres to the belief that only the most basic of logic belongs in the template or view layer.
Basic Syntax
Go Templates are HTML files with the addition of variables and functions. Go Template variables and functions are accessible within {{ }}
.
Access a Predefined Variable
A predefined variable could be a variable already existing in the
current scope (like the .Title
example in the Variables section below) or a custom variable (like the
$address
example in that same section).
{{ .Title }}
{{ $address }}
Parameters for functions are separated using spaces. The general syntax is:
{{ FUNCTION ARG1 ARG2 .. }}
The following example calls the add
function with inputs of 1
and 2
:
{{ add 1 2 }}
Methods and Fields are Accessed via dot Notation
Accessing the Page Parameter bar
defined in a piece of content's front matter.
{{ .Params.bar }}
Parentheses Can be Used to Group Items Together
{{ if or (isset .Params "alt") (isset .Params "caption") }} Caption {{ end }}
A Single Statement Can be Split over Multiple Lines
{{ if or
(isset .Params "alt")
(isset .Params "caption")
}}
Raw String Literals Can Include Newlines
{{ $msg := `Line one.
Line two.` }}
Variables
Each Go Template gets a data object. In Hugo, each template is passed
a Page
. In the below example, .Title
is one of the elements
accessible in that Page
variable.
With the Page
being the default scope of a template, the Title
element in current scope (.
-- "the dot") is accessible simply
by the dot-prefix (.Title
):
<title>{{ .Title }}</title>
Values can also be stored in custom variables and referenced later:
{{% note %}}
The custom variables need to be prefixed with $
.
{{% /note %}}
{{ $address := "123 Main St." }}
{{ $address }}
Variables can be re-defined using the =
operator. The example below
prints "Var is Hugo Home" on the home page, and "Var is Hugo Page" on
all other pages:
{{ $var := "Hugo Page" }}
{{ if .IsHome }}
{{ $var = "Hugo Home" }}
{{ end }}
Var is {{ $var }}
Functions
Go Templates only ship with a few basic functions but also provide a mechanism for applications to extend the original set.
Hugo template functions provide additional functionality specific to building websites. Functions are called by using their name followed by the required parameters separated by spaces. Template functions cannot be added without recompiling Hugo.
Example 1: Adding Numbers
{{ add 1 2 }}
<!-- prints 3 -->
Example 2: Comparing Numbers
{{ lt 1 2 }}
<!-- prints true (i.e., since 1 is less than 2) -->
Note that both examples make use of Go Template's math functions.
{{% note %}} There are more boolean operators than those listed in the Hugo docs in the Go Template documentation. {{% /note %}}
Includes
When including another template, you will need to pass it the data that it would need to access.
{{% note %}} To pass along the current context, please remember to include a trailing dot. {{% /note %}}
The templates location will always be starting at the layouts/
directory
within Hugo.
Partial
The partial
function is used to include partial templates using
the syntax {{ partial "<PATH>/<PARTIAL>.<EXTENSION>" . }}
.
Example of including a layouts/partials/header.html
partial:
{{ partial "header.html" . }}
Template
The template
function was used to include partial templates
in much older Hugo versions. Now it's useful only for calling
internal templates. The syntax is {{ template "_internal/<TEMPLATE>.<EXTENSION>" . }}
.
{{% note %}} The available internal templates can be found here. {{% /note %}}
Example of including the internal opengraph.html
template:
{{ template "_internal/opengraph.html" . }}
Logic
Go Templates provide the most basic iteration and conditional logic.
Iteration
The Go Templates make heavy use of range
to iterate over a map,
array, or slice. The following are different examples of how to
use range
.
Example 1: Using Context (.
)
{{ range $array }}
{{ . }} <!-- The . represents an element in $array -->
{{ end }}
Example 2: Declaring a variable name for an array element's value
{{ range $elem_val := $array }}
{{ $elem_val }}
{{ end }}
Example 3: Declaring variable names for an array element's index and value
For an array or slice, the first declared variable will map to each element's index.
{{ range $elem_index, $elem_val := $array }}
{{ $elem_index }} -- {{ $elem_val }}
{{ end }}
Example 4: Declaring variable names for a map element's key and value
For a map, the first declared variable will map to each map element's key.
{{ range $elem_key, $elem_val := $map }}
{{ $elem_key }} -- {{ $elem_val }}
{{ end }}
Example 5: Conditional on empty map, array, or slice
If the map, array, or slice passed into the range is zero-length then the else statement is evaluated.
{{ range $array }}
{{ . }}
{{ else }}
<!-- This is only evaluated if $array is empty -->
{{ end }}
Conditionals
if
, else
, with
, or
, and
and not
provide the framework for handling conditional logic in Go Templates. Like range
, if
and with
statements are closed with an {{ end }}
.
Go Templates treat the following values as false:
false
(boolean)- 0 (integer)
- any zero-length array, slice, map, or string
Example 1: with
It is common to write "if something exists, do this" kind of
statements using with
.
{{% note %}}
with
rebinds the context .
within its scope (just like in range
).
{{% /note %}}
It skips the block if the variable is absent, or if it evaluates to "false" as explained above.
{{ with .Params.title }}
<h4>{{ . }}</h4>
{{ end }}
Example 2: with
.. else
Below snippet uses the "description" front-matter parameter's value if
set, else uses the default .Summary
Page variable:
{{ with .Param "description" }}
{{ . }}
{{ else }}
{{ .Summary }}
{{ end }}
See the .Param
function.
Example 3: if
An alternative (and a more verbose) way of writing with
is using
if
. Here, the .
does not get rebound.
Below example is "Example 1" rewritten using if
:
{{ if isset .Params "title" }}
<h4>{{ index .Params "title" }}</h4>
{{ end }}
Example 4: if
.. else
Below example is "Example 2" rewritten using if
.. else
, and using
isset
function + .Params
variable (different from the
.Param
function) instead:
{{ if (isset .Params "description") }}
{{ index .Params "description" }}
{{ else }}
{{ .Summary }}
{{ end }}
Example 5: if
.. else if
.. else
Unlike with
, if
can contain else if
clauses too.
{{ if (isset .Params "description") }}
{{ index .Params "description" }}
{{ else if (isset .Params "summary") }}
{{ index .Params "summary" }}
{{ else }}
{{ .Summary }}
{{ end }}
Example 6: and
& or
{{ if (and (or (isset .Params "title") (isset .Params "caption")) (isset .Params "attr")) }}
Pipes
One of the most powerful components of Go Templates is the ability to stack actions one after another. This is done by using pipes. Borrowed from Unix pipes, the concept is simple: each pipeline's output becomes the input of the following pipe.
Because of the very simple syntax of Go Templates, the pipe is essential to being able to chain together function calls. One limitation of the pipes is that they can only work with a single value and that value becomes the last parameter of the next pipeline.
A few simple examples should help convey how to use the pipe.
Example 1: shuffle
The following two examples are functionally the same:
{{ shuffle (seq 1 5) }}
{{ (seq 1 5) | shuffle }}
Example 2: index
The following accesses the page parameter called "disqus_url" and escapes the HTML. This example also uses the index
function, which is built into Go Templates:
{{ index .Params "disqus_url" | html }}
Example 3: or
with isset
{{ if or (or (isset .Params "title") (isset .Params "caption")) (isset .Params "attr") }}
Stuff Here
{{ end }}
Could be rewritten as
{{ if isset .Params "caption" | or isset .Params "title" | or isset .Params "attr" }}
Stuff Here
{{ end }}
Context (aka "the dot")
The most easily overlooked concept to understand about Go Templates is
that {{ . }}
always refers to the current context.
- In the top level of your template, this will be the data set made available to it.
- Inside an iteration, however, it will have the value of the
current item in the loop; i.e.,
{{ . }}
will no longer refer to the data available to the entire page.
If you need to access page-level data (e.g., page params set in front matter) from within the loop, you will likely want to do one of the following:
1. Define a Variable Independent of Context
The following shows how to define a variable independent of the context.
{{< code file="tags-range-with-page-variable.html" >}} {{ $title := .Site.Title }}
-
{{ range .Params.tags }}
- {{ . }} - {{ $title }} {{ end }}
{{% note %}}
Notice how once we have entered the loop (i.e. range
), the value of {{ . }}
has changed. We have defined a variable outside the loop ({{ $title }}
) that we've assigned a value so that we have access to the value from within the loop as well.
{{% /note %}}
2. Use $.
to Access the Global Context
$
has special significance in your templates. $
is set to the starting value of .
("the dot") by default. This is a documented feature of Go text/template. This means you have access to the global context from anywhere. Here is an equivalent example of the preceding code block but now using $
to grab .Site.Title
from the global context:
{{< code file="range-through-tags-w-global.html" >}}
-
{{ range .Params.tags }}
- {{ . }} - {{ $.Site.Title }} {{ end }}
{{% warning "Don't Redefine the Dot" %}}
The built-in magic of $
would cease to work if someone were to mischievously redefine the special character; e.g. {{ $ := .Site }}
. Don't do it. You may, of course, recover from this mischief by using {{ $ := . }}
in a global context to reset $
to its default value.
{{% /note %}}
Whitespace
Go 1.6 includes the ability to trim the whitespace from either side of a Go tag by including a hyphen (-
) and space immediately beside the corresponding {{
or }}
delimiter.
For instance, the following Go Template will include the newlines and horizontal tab in its HTML output:
<div>
{{ .Title }}
</div>
Which will output:
<div>
Hello, World!
</div>
Leveraging the -
in the following example will remove the extra white space surrounding the .Title
variable and remove the newline:
<div>
{{- .Title -}}
</div>
Which then outputs:
<div>Hello, World!</div>
Go considers the following characters whitespace:
- space
- horizontal tab
- carriage return
- newline
Comments
In order to keep your templates organized and share information throughout your team, you may want to add comments to your templates. There are two ways to do that with Hugo.
Go Templates comments
Go Templates support {{/*
and */}}
to open and close a comment block. Nothing within that block will be rendered.
For example:
Bonsoir, {{/* {{ add 0 + 2 }} */}}Eliott.
Will render Bonsoir, Eliott.
, and not care about the syntax error (add 0 + 2
) in the comment block.
HTML comments
You can add html comments by piping a string HTML code comment to safeHTML
.
For example:
{{ "<!-- This is an HTML comment -->" | safeHTML }}
If you need variables to construct such HTML comments, just pipe printf
to safeHTML
.
For example:
{{ printf "<!-- Our website is named: %s -->" .Site.Title | safeHTML }}
HTML comments containing Go Templates
HTML comments are by default stripped, but their content is still evaluated. That means that although the HTML comment will never render any content to the final HTML pages, code contained within the comment may fail the build process.
{{% note %}} Do not try to comment out Go Template code using HTML comments. {{% /note %}}
<!-- {{ $author := "Emma Goldman" }} was a great woman. -->
{{ $author }}
The templating engine will strip the content within the HTML comment, but will first evaluate any Go Template code if present within. So the above example will render Emma Goldman
, as the $author
variable got evaluated in the HTML comment. But the build would have failed if that code in the HTML comment had an error.
Hugo Parameters
Hugo provides the option of passing values to your template layer through your site configuration (i.e. for site-wide values) or through the metadata of each specific piece of content (i.e. the front matter). You can define any values of any type and use them however you want in your templates, as long as the values are supported by the front matter format.
Use Content (Page
) Parameters
You can provide variables to be used by templates in individual content's front matter.
An example of this is used in the Hugo docs. Most of the pages benefit from having the table of contents provided, but sometimes the table of contents doesn't make a lot of sense. We've defined a notoc
variable in our front matter that will prevent a table of contents from rendering when specifically set to true
.
Here is the example front matter:
{{< code-toggle file="content/example.md" fm=true copy=false >}} title: Example notoc: true {{< /code-toggle >}}
Here is an example of corresponding code that could be used inside a toc.html
partial template:
{{< code file="layouts/partials/toc.html" >}} {{ if not .Params.notoc }}
{{ end }} {{< /code >}}We want the default behavior to be for pages to include a TOC unless otherwise specified. This template checks to make sure that the notoc:
field in this page's front matter is not true
.
Use Site Configuration Parameters
You can arbitrarily define as many site-level parameters as you want in your site's configuration file. These parameters are globally available in your templates.
For instance, you might declare the following:
{{< code-toggle file="config" >}} params: copyrighthtml: "Copyright © 2017 John Doe. All Rights Reserved." twitteruser: "spf13" sidebarrecentlimit: 5 {{< /code >}}
Within a footer layout, you might then declare a <footer>
that is only rendered if the copyrighthtml
parameter is provided. If it is provided, you will then need to declare the string is safe to use via the safeHTML
function so that the HTML entity is not escaped again. This would let you easily update just your top-level config file each January 1st, instead of hunting through your templates.
{{ if .Site.Params.copyrighthtml }}
<footer>
<div class="text-center">{{ .Site.Params.CopyrightHTML | safeHTML }}</div>
</footer>
{{ end }}
An alternative way of writing the "if
" and then referencing the same value is to use with
instead. with
rebinds the context (.
) within its scope and skips the block if the variable is absent:
{{< code file="layouts/partials/twitter.html" >}} {{ with .Site.Params.twitteruser }}
{{ end }} {{< /code >}}Finally, you can pull "magic constants" out of your layouts as well. The following uses the first
function, as well as the .RelPermalink
page variable and the .Site.Pages
site variable.
<nav>
<h1>Recent Posts</h1>
<ul>
{{- range first .Site.Params.SidebarRecentLimit .Site.Pages -}}
<li><a href="{{ .RelPermalink }}">{{ .Title }}</a></li>
{{- end -}}
</ul>
</nav>
Example: Show Future Events
Given the following content structure and front matter:
content/
└── events/
├── event-1.md
├── event-2.md
└── event-3.md
{{< code-toggle file="content/events/event-1.md" copy=false >}} title = 'Event 1' date = 2021-12-06T10:37:16-08:00 draft = false start_date = 2021-12-05T09:00:00-08:00 end_date = 2021-12-05T11:00:00-08:00 {{< /code-toggle >}}
This partial template renders future events:
{{< code file="layouts/partials/future-events.html" >}}
Future Events
-
{{ range where site.RegularPages "Type" "events" }}
{{ if gt (.Params.start_date | time.AsTime) now }}
{{ $startDate := .Params.start_date | time.Format ":date_medium" }}
- {{ .LinkTitle }} - {{ $startDate }} {{ end }} {{ end }}
If you restrict front matter to the TOML format, and omit quotation marks surrounding date fields, you can perform date comparisons without casting.
{{< code file="layouts/partials/future-events.html" >}}
Future Events
-
{{ range where (where site.RegularPages "Type" "events") "Params.start_date" "gt" now }}
{{ $startDate := .Params.start_date | time.Format ":date_medium" }}
- {{ .LinkTitle }} - {{ $startDate }} {{ end }}