DEV Community

Cover image for Hugo Templating Basics
David Large for CloudCannon

Posted on • Updated on • Originally published at cloudcannon.com

Hugo Templating Basics

By Mike Neumegen

Brought to you by CloudCannon, the Git-based CMS for Hugo.

With Hugo templating, you can control how your page is rendered. You can use variables, loop over arrays, check conditions, and run functions. Think of it as a simple programming language to help build the pages on your site. Those curly braces in your layout {{ }}, that’s Hugo templating.

What is front matter?

Front matter is a snippet of metadata at the top of your content files. Some of the metadata will be specifically for Hugo, for example, setting a layout, or indicating the current page is a draft. Other forms of metadata will be specific for your site, for example, indicating which type of hero to use on the page, or a list of your top five favorite foods.

Front matter comes in the form of a small YAML snippet at the top of content files. We’ve seen this on both the index and about pages:

    ---
    title: Home
    ---
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

It might not look like much, but we can reference this front matter in our layout using Hugo templating.

What is Hugo templating?

Hugo uses Go templating as its templating language in layouts. It’s easy once you get your head around it. As with many things in Hugo land, sometimes it’s easier to show rather than tell.

Examples of Hugo templating

Output a string

    <p>A Go template is a normal HTML page. When you want to execute a piece of 
    code, you can use double curly braces like this: {{ "Hello!" }}.</p>
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Output from front matter

    <!-- You can reference a variable from your front matter in a layout with .Params. For example, you 
    could output the title on your pages with: -->

    <title>{{ .Params.title }}</title>
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Output from site configuration

    <!-- Sometimes you'll want to set a variable globally in your config.toml. 
    Hugo has already initalized a title in your config.toml. You can access
    a variable from your global config with site. For example: -->

    <title>{{ .Params.title }} | {{ .Site.title }}</title>
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Conditions

    <!-- We might want to check if the front matter title exists. If
    it exists, output it; if not, use the global config title. -->

    {{ if isset .Params "title" }}
      <title>{{ .Params.title }}</title>
    {{ else }}
      <title>{{ .Site.title }}</title>
    {{ end }}
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Set and output a variable

    <!-- variables at set with a $ sign. For example: -->
    {{ $favorite_food := "Gazelle" }}
    {{ $favorite_food }}
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Looping

    <!-- In Go, an array that can change size is called a slice.
    You can iterate over an array or slice using range. -->
    {{ $best_friends := slice "pumbaa" "timon" "nala" "rafiki" }}

    <ul>
    {{ range $best_friends }}
      <li>{{ . }}</li>
    {{ end }}
    </ul>
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Nested Key values

Content file:

    ---
    title: Appearance
    apperance:
      eyes: green
      snoot: boopable
      whiskers: true
      limbs:
        - claws: 5
          side: left
          position: front
        - claws: 4
          side: right
          position: front
        - claws: 3
          side: left
          position: back
        - claws: 5
          side: right
          position: back
    ---
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Layout file:

    <!-- If we want to output all of these variables, we could call 
    .Params.appearance.x for each one. Instead we could use `with` to change 
    the context to '.'. It also has the benefit of checking whether the 
    variable exists and won't run the block if it doesn't. -->

    {{ with .Params.appearance }}
    <h3>My top appearance traits</h3>
    <dl>
        <dt>Eyes</dt>
      <dd>{{ .eyes }}</dd>

      <dt>Snoot</dt>
      <dd>{{ .snoot }}</dd>

      <dt>Whiskers</dt>
      <dd>{{ .whiskers }}</dd>

        {{ with .limbs }}
        <dt>Claws</dt>
        <dd>
            <ul>
          {{ range . }}
            <li>{{ .position }} {{ .side }} {{ .claws }</li>
          {{ end }}
          </ul>
        </dd>
      {{ end }}
    </dl>
    {{ end }}
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

These are the foundations of templating. You’ll be using all of these concepts throughout your Hugo journey. You can browse through the templating documentation to get an idea of what else you can do.

If you like to keep your HTML output tidy, you can use {{-</code> and <code>-}} to trim the whitespace surrounding the tag. The Hugo documentation has a great example of this.

Putting it all together

Let’s put our new Hugo templating knowledge into action by adding a footer to your website that includes your name and current year. On top of that, we’ll add an optional front matter field you can use to hide the footer on a particular page.

Let’s start with an easy one. Your name. Add it as a new key in your config.toml. Because this is just something for this site rather than a special Hugo term, we put it under the params object:

    [params]
    name = 'Simba'
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Now let’s create the partial. Add footer.html to your layout partials directory with the following:

    {{ with .Params.hide_footer }}
      <!-- No footer here! -->
    {{ else }}
      <footer>
        Website made by {{ .Site.Params.name }} in {{ now.Year }}
      </footer>
    {{ end }}
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

And finally call the partial before </body> in the baseof.html layout:

    {{ partial "footer.html" . }}
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

To check the hide_footer front matter is working, let’s turn the footer off on your about.md page by adding this to the front matter:

    hide_footer: true
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Run hugo serve and look at your site in the browser. The home page has the footer and the about page doesn’t.

What’s next?

Next, we’ll explore creating a blog in Hugo and put our new Hugo templating knowledge to the test.

Top comments (0)