DESIGN SYSTEM

  • Principles
  • Components
  • Documentation

What's on this Page

    • Add Content and Front Matter to Section Templates
    • Section Template Lookup Order
    • Page Kinds
    • .Site.GetPage with Sections
    • Example: Creating a Default Section Template
      • Example: Using .Site.GetPage
TEMPLATES

Section Page Templates

Templates used for section pages are lists and therefore have all the variables and methods available to list pages.

Add Content and Front Matter to Section Templates

To effectively leverage section page templates, you should first understand Hugo’s content organization and, specifically, the purpose of _index.md for adding content and front matter to section and other list pages.

Section Template Lookup Order

See Template Lookup.

Page Kinds

Every Page in Hugo has a .Kind attribute.

KindDescriptionExample
homeThe home page/index.html
pageA page showing a regular pagemy-post page (/posts/my-post/index.html)
sectionA page listing regular pages from a given sectionposts section (/posts/index.html)
taxonomyA page listing regular pages from a given taxonomy termpage for the term awesome from tags taxonomy (/tags/awesome/index.html)
taxonomyTermA page listing terms from a given taxonomypage for the tags taxonomy (/tags/index.html)

.Site.GetPage with Sections

Kind can easily be combined with the where function in your templates to create kind-specific lists of content. This method is ideal for creating lists, but there are times where you may want to fetch just the index page of a single section via the section’s path.

The .GetPage function looks up an index page of a given Kind and path.

You can call .Site.GetPage with two arguments: kind (one of the valid values of Kind from above) and kind value.

Examples:

  • {{ .Site.GetPage "section" "posts" }}
  • {{ .Site.GetPage "page" "search" }}

Example: Creating a Default Section Template

layouts/_default/section.html

{{ define "main" }}
  <main>
      {{ .Content }}
          <ul class="contents">
          {{ range .Paginator.Pages }}
              <li>{{.Title}}
                  <div>
                    {{ partial "summary.html" . }}
                  </div>
              </li>
          {{ end }}
          </ul>
      {{ partial "pagination.html" . }}
  </main>
{{ end }}

Example: Using .Site.GetPage

The .Site.GetPage example that follows assumes the following project directory structure:

.
└── content
    ├── blog
    │   ├── _index.md # "title: My Hugo Blog" in the front matter
    │   ├── post-1.md
    │   ├── post-2.md
    │   └── post-3.md
    └── events #Note there is no _index.md file in "events"
        ├── event-1.md
        └── event-2.md

.Site.GetPage will return nil if no _index.md page is found. Therefore, if content/blog/_index.md does not exist, the template will output the section name:

<h1>{{ with .Site.GetPage "section" "blog" }}{{ .Title }}{{ end }}</h1>

Since blog has a section index page with front matter at content/blog/_index.md, the above code will return the following result:

<h1>My Hugo Blog</h1>

If we try the same code with the events section, however, Hugo will default to the section title because there is no content/events/_index.md from which to pull content and front matter:

<h1>{{ with .Site.GetPage "section" "events" }}{{ .Title }}{{ end }}</h1>

Which then returns the following:

<h1>Events</h1>

See Also

  • Content Types
  • Menu Templates
  • Lists of Content in Hugo
  • Content Sections
  • Partial Templates
  • Foundation styles (FS)
  • Content text (CT)
  • Buttons and links (BL)
  • Form elements (FE)
  • Icons (IC)
  • Miscellaneous (MS)
“Section Page Templates” was last updated: January 29, 2019: A little bit of naming reorganisation (8fb631a0)
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  • Principles
  • Components
  • Documentation
  • Foundation styles (FS)
  • Content text (CT)
  • Buttons and links (BL)
  • Form elements (FE)
  • Icons (IC)
  • Miscellaneous (MS)