.GetPage
Syntax
.GetPage PATH
.GetPage
returns a page of a given path
. Both Site
and Page
implements this method. The Page
variant will, if given a relative path – i.e. a path without a leading /
– try look for the page relative to the current page.
{{ with .Site.GetPage "/blog" }}{{ .Title }}{{ end }}
This method will return nil
when no page could be found, so the above will not print anything if the blog section is not found.
To find a regular page in the blog section::
{{ with .Site.GetPage "/blog/my-post.md" }}{{ .Title }}{{ end }}
And since Page
also provides a .GetPage
method, the above is the same as:
{{ with .Site.GetPage "/blog" }}
{{ with .GetPage "my-post.md" }}{{ .Title }}{{ end }}
{{ end }}
.GetPage and multilingual sites
The previous examples have used the full content file name to look up the post. Depending on how you have organized your content (whether you have the language code in the file name or not, e.g. my-post.en.md
), you may want to do the lookup without extension. This will get you the current language’s version of the page:
{{ with .Site.GetPage "/blog/my-post" }}{{ .Title }}{{ end }}
.GetPage example
This code snippet—in the form of a partial template—allows you to do the following:
- Grab the index object of your
tags
taxonomy. - Assign this object to a variable,
$t
- Sort the terms associated with the taxonomy by popularity.
- Grab the top two most popular terms in the taxonomy (i.e., the two most popular tags assigned to content.
<ul class="most-popular-tags">
{{ $t := .Site.GetPage "/tags" }}
{{ range first 2 $t.Data.Terms.ByCount }}
<li>{{ . }}</li>
{{ end }}
</ul>
.GetPage
on page bundles
If the page retrieved by .GetPage
is a Leaf Bundle, and you
need to get the nested page resources in that, you will need to use the
methods in .Resources
as explained in the Page Resources
section.
See the Headless Bundle documentation for an example.