Hugo Partials
Learn how to break down your Hugo pages into smaller “components” with partials in this Hugo tutorial.
The idea behind a partial is simple: it’s a file that can be included into a layout to reduce repetition or simply hide some complexity. You’ll add a nav bar to your site with a partial. While you could add this logic directly to your baseof.html
, sometimes it’s nice to split a layout up into smaller partials so you don’t need to deal with a 2000-line file.
Your first partial
Create a partials
directory in your layouts
directory so the final path will be /layouts/partials/
. Inside create nav.html
with the following contents:
<nav>
<ul>
<li><a href="/">Home</a></li>
<li><a href="/about/">About</a></li>
</ul>
</nav>
That’s the navigation taken care of. Now it’s time to include it in your layout. Open /layouts/_default/baseof.html
and add the following below <body>
:
{{ partial "nav.html" }}
In Go, your single quotes are no good for strings, only double quotes designate a string.
Render your page, and there you have it.
Your second partial
Let’s try another scenario to demonstrate the power of partials. We will simplify baseof.html
even further by moving the contents of <head>
to a partial. Create /layouts/partials/meta.html
with the following content:
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>{{ print .Page.Title }}</title>
{{ $style := resources.Get "sass/main.scss" | resources.ToCSS | resources.Minify }}
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ $style.Permalink }}">
In this partial, we have variables that need the context of the current page. Lucky for you, passing the context of the current page can be done with a single character.
Open up /layouts/_default/baseof.html
and replace the contents of <head>
with the following:
{{ partial "meta.html" . }}
That little .
at the end is passing the context of the current page, which allows the partial to print out the current page’s title. You’ll see this come up a lot in your Hugo sites, just you wait.
What’s next?
In the next lesson we’ll go through the basics of Hugo templating and see how we can manipulate and iterate over data.
Lessons in this Tutorial
Hugo Beginner Tutorial Series