12 KiB
+++ title = "Overview" weight = 10 +++
Zola uses the Tera template engine, which is very similar to Jinja2, Liquid and Twig.
As this documentation will only talk about how templates work in Zola, please read the Tera template documentation if you want to learn more about it first.
All templates live in the templates
directory. If you are not sure what variables are available in a template,
you can place {{ __tera_context }}
in the template to print the whole context.
A few variables are available on all templates except feeds and the sitemap:
config
: the configuration without any modificationscurrent_path
: the path (full URL withoutbase_url
) of the current page, always starting with a/
current_url
: the full URL for the current pagelang
: the language for the current page
Config variables can be accessed like config.variable
, in HTML for example with {{ config.base_url }}
.
The 404 template does not get current_path
and current_url
(this information cannot be determined).
Standard templates
By default, Zola will look for three templates: index.html
, which is applied
to the site homepage; section.html
, which is applied to all sections (any HTML
page generated by creating a directory within your content
directory); and
page.html
, which is applied to all pages (any HTML page generated by creating an
.md
file within your content
directory).
The homepage is always a section (regardless of whether it contains other pages).
Thus, the index.html
and section.html
templates both have access to the
section variables. The page.html
template has access to the page variables.
The page and section variables are described in more detail in the next section.
Built-in templates
Zola comes with four built-in templates: atom.xml
and rss.xml
(described in
Feeds), sitemap.xml
(described in Sitemap),
and robots.txt
(described in Robots.txt).
Additionally, themes can add their own templates, which will be applied if not
overridden. You can override built-in or theme templates by creating a template with
the same name in the correct path. For example, you can override the Atom template by
creating a templates/atom.xml
file.
Custom templates
In addition to the standard index.html
, section.html
and page.html
templates,
you may also create custom templates by creating an .html
file in the templates
directory. These custom templates will not be used by default. Instead, a custom template will only be used if you apply it by setting the template
front-matter variable to the path for that template (or if you include
it in another template that is applied). For example, if you created a custom template for your site's About page called about.html
, you could apply it to your about.md
page by including the following front matter in your about.md
page:
+++
title = "About Us"
template = "about.html"
+++
Custom templates are not required to live at the root of your templates
directory.
For example, product_pages/with_pictures.html
is a valid template.
Built-in filters
Zola adds a few filters in addition to those already present in Tera.
markdown
Converts the given variable to HTML using Markdown. This doesn't apply any of the features that Zola adds to Markdown; for example, internal links and shortcodes won't work.
By default, the filter will wrap all text in a paragraph. To disable this behaviour, you can
pass true
to the inline argument:
{{ some_text | markdown(inline=true) }}
You do not need to use this filter with page.content
or section.content
, the content is already rendered.
base64_encode
Encode the variable to base64.
base64_decode
Decode the variable from base64.
Built-in global functions
Zola adds a few global functions to those in Tera to make it easier to develop complex sites.
get_page
Takes a path to an .md
file and returns the associated page.
{% set page = get_page(path="blog/page2.md") %}
get_section
Takes a path to an _index.md
file and returns the associated section.
{% set section = get_section(path="blog/_index.md") %}
If you only need the metadata of the section, you can pass metadata_only=true
to the function:
{% set section = get_section(path="blog/_index.md", metadata_only=true) %}
get_url
Gets the permalink for the given path.
If the path starts with @/
, it will be treated as an internal
link like the ones used in Markdown, starting from the root content
directory.
{% set url = get_url(path="@/blog/_index.md") %}
It accepts an optional parameter lang
in order to compute a language-aware URL in multilingual websites. Assuming config.base_url
is "http://example.com"
, the following snippet will:
- return
"http://example.com/blog/"
ifconfig.default_language
is"en"
- return
"http://example.com/en/blog/"
ifconfig.default_language
is not"en"
and"en"
appears inconfig.languages
- fail otherwise, with the error message
"'en' is not an authorized language (check config.languages)."
{% set url = get_url(path="@/blog/_index.md", lang="en") %}
This can also be used to get the permalinks for static assets, for example if
we want to link to the file that is located at static/css/app.css
:
{{/* get_url(path="css/app.css") */}}
By default, assets will not have a trailing slash. You can force one by passing trailing_slash=true
to the get_url
function.
An example is:
{{/* get_url(path="css/app.css", trailing_slash=true) */}}
In the case of non-internal links, you can also add a cachebust of the format ?h=<sha256>
at the end of a URL
by passing cachebust=true
to the get_url
function.
get_file_hash
Gets the hash digest for a static file. Supported hashes are SHA-256, SHA-384 (default) and SHA-512. Requires path
. The sha_type
key is optional and must be one of 256, 384 or 512.
{{/* get_file_hash(path="js/app.js", sha_type=256) */}}
This can be used to implement subresource integrity. Do note that subresource integrity is typically used when using external scripts, which get_file_hash
does not support.
<script src="{{/* get_url(path="js/app.js") */}}"
integrity="sha384-{{/* get_file_hash(path="js/app.js", sha_type=384) */}}"></script>
Whenever hashing files, whether using get_file_hash
or get_url(..., cachebust=true)
, the file is searched for in three places: static/
, content/
and the output path (so e.g. compiled SASS can be hashed, too.)
get_image_metadata
Gets metadata for an image. This supports common formats like JPEG, PNG, as well as SVG.
Currently, the only supported keys are width
and height
.
{% set meta = get_image_metadata(path="...") %}
Our image is {{ meta.width }}x{{ meta.height }}
get_taxonomy_url
Gets the permalink for the taxonomy item found.
{% set url = get_taxonomy_url(kind="categories", name=page.taxonomies.category, lang=page.lang) %}
name
will almost always come from a variable but in case you want to do it manually,
the value should be the same as the one in the front matter, not the slugified version.
lang
(optional) default to config.default_language
in config.toml
get_taxonomy
Gets the whole taxonomy of a specific kind.
{% set categories = get_taxonomy(kind="categories") %}
The type of the output is:
kind: TaxonomyConfig;
items: Array<TaxonomyTerm>;
See the Taxonomies documentation for a full documentation of those types.
load_data
Loads data from a file or URL. Supported file types include toml, json, csv and bibtex. Any other file type will be loaded as plain text.
The path
argument specifies the path to the data file relative to your base directory, where your config.toml
is.
As a security precaution, if this file is outside the main site directory, your site will fail to build.
{% set data = load_data(path="content/blog/story/data.toml") %}
The optional format
argument allows you to specify and override which data type is contained
within the file specified in the path
argument. Valid entries are toml
, json
, csv
, bibtex
or plain
. If the format
argument isn't specified, then the path extension is used.
{% set data = load_data(path="content/blog/story/data.txt", format="json") %}
Use the plain
format for when your file has a toml/json/csv extension but you want to load it as plain text.
For toml and json, the data is loaded into a structure matching the original data file; however, for csv there is no native notion of such a structure. Instead, the data is separated into a data structure containing headers and records. See the example below to see how this works.
In the template:
{% set data = load_data(path="content/blog/story/data.csv") %}
In the content/blog/story/data.csv file:
Number, Title
1,Gutenberg
2,Printing
The equivalent json value of the parsed data would be stored in the data
variable in the
template:
{
"headers": ["Number", "Title"],
"records": [
["1", "Gutenberg"],
["2", "Printing"]
],
}
The bibtex
format loads data into a structure matching the format used by the
nom-bibtex crate. The following is an example of data
in bibtex format:
@preamble{"A bibtex preamble" # " this is."}
@Comment{
Here is a comment.
}
Another comment!
@string(name = "Vincent Prouillet")
@string(github = "https://github.com/getzola/zola")
@misc {my_citation_key,
author= name,
title = "Zola",
note = "github: " # github
} }
The following is the json-equivalent format of the produced bibtex data structure:
{
"preambles": ["A bibtex preamble this is."],
"comments": ["Here is a comment.", "Another comment!"],
"variables": {
"name": "Vincent Prouillet",
"github": "https://github.com/getzola/zola"
},
"bibliographies": [
{
"entry_type": "misc",
"citation_key": "my_citation_key",
"tags": {
"author": "Vincent Prouillet",
"title": "Zola",
"note": "github: https://github.com/getzola/zola"
}
}
]
}
Finally, the bibtex data can be accessed from the template as follows:
{% set tags = data.bibliographies[0].tags %}
This was generated using {{ tags.title }}, authored by {{ tags.author }}.
Remote content
Instead of using a file, you can load data from a remote URL. This can be done by specifying a url
parameter
to load_data
rather than path
.
{% set response = load_data(url="https://api.github.com/repos/getzola/zola") %}
{{ response }}
By default, the response body will be returned with no parsing. This can be changed by using the format
argument
as below.
{% set response = load_data(url="https://api.github.com/repos/getzola/zola", format="json") %}
{{ response }}
Data caching
Data file loading and remote requests are cached in memory during the build, so multiple requests aren't made to the same endpoint. URLs are cached based on the URL, and data files are cached based on the file modified time. The format is also taken into account when caching, so a request will be sent twice if it's loaded with two different formats.
trans
Gets the translation of the given key
, for the default_language
or the lang
uage given
{{/* trans(key="title") */}}
{{/* trans(key="title", lang="fr") */}}
resize_image
Resizes an image file. Please refer to Content / Image Processing for complete documentation.