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``` git subtree add --prefix=docs/ https://github.com/gohugoio/hugoDocs.git master --squash ``` Closes #11925
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Taxonomies | Returns a data structure containing the site's taxonomy objects, the terms within each taxonomy object, and the pages to which the terms are assigned. |
|
Conceptually, the Taxonomies
method on a Site
object returns a data structure such as:
{{< code-toggle >}} taxonomy a:
- term 1:
- page 1
- page 2
- term 2:
- page 1 taxonomy b:
- term 1:
- page 2
- term 2:
- page 1
- page 2 {{< /code-toggle >}}
For example, on a book review site you might create two taxonomies; one for genres and another for authors.
With this site configuration:
{{< code-toggle file=hugo >}} taxonomies genre = 'genres' author = 'authors' {{< /code-toggle >}}
And this content structure:
content/
├── books/
│ ├── and-then-there-were-none.md --> genres: suspense
│ ├── death-on-the-nile.md --> genres: suspense
│ └── jamaica-inn.md --> genres: suspense, romance
│ └── pride-and-prejudice.md --> genres: romance
└── _index.md
Conceptually, the taxonomies data structure looks like:
{{< code-toggle >}} genres:
- suspense:
- And Then There Were None
- Death on the Nile
- Jamaica Inn
- romance:
- Jamaica Inn
- Pride and Prejudice authors:
- achristie:
- And Then There Were None
- Death on the Nile
- ddmaurier:
- Jamaica Inn
- jausten:
- Pride and Prejudice {{< /code-toggle >}}
To list the "suspense" books:
<ul>
{{ range .Site.Taxonomies.genres.suspense }}
<li><a href="{{ .RelPermalink }}">{{ .LinkTitle }}</a></li>
{{ end }}
</ul>
Hugo renders this to:
<ul>
<li><a href="/books/and-then-there-were-none/">And Then There Were None</a></li>
<li><a href="/books/death-on-the-nile/">Death on the Nile</a></li>
<li><a href="/books/jamaica-inn/">Jamaica Inn</a></li>
</ul>
{{% note %}} Hugo's taxonomy system is powerful, allowing you to classify content and create relationships between pages.
Please see the taxonomies section for a complete explanation and examples.
{{% /note %}}