Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
668 lines (502 loc) · 24.2 KB

README-GENERATOR.md

File metadata and controls

668 lines (502 loc) · 24.2 KB

Jekyll::Paginate V2::Generator

The Generator forms the core of the pagination logic. It is responsible for reading the posts and collections in your site and split them correctly across multiple pages according to the supplied configuration. It also performs the necessary functions to link to the previous and next pages in the page-sets that it generates.

The code was based on the original design of jekyll-paginate and features were sourced from discussions such as #27 (thanks Günter Kits).

Site configuration

The pagination gem is configured in the site's _config.yml file by including the pagination configuration element

############################################################
# Site configuration for the Jekyll 3 Pagination Gem
# The values here represent the defaults if nothing is set
pagination:
  
  # Site-wide kill switch, disabled here it doesn't run at all 
  enabled: true

  # Set to 'true' to enable pagination debugging. This can be enabled in the site config or only for individual pagination pages
  debug: false

  # The default document collection to paginate if nothing is specified ('posts' is default)
  collection: 'posts'

  # How many objects per paginated page, used to be `paginate` (default: 0, means all)
  per_page: 10

  # The permalink structure for the paginated pages (this can be any level deep)
  permalink: '/page/:num/' # Pages are index.html inside this folder (default)
  #permalink: '/page/:num.html' # Pages are simple html files 
  #permalink: '/page/:num' # Pages are html files, linked jekyll extensionless permalink style.

  # Optional the title format for the paginated pages (supports :title for original page title, :num for pagination page number, :max for total number of pages)
  title: ':title - page :num'

  # Limit how many pagenated pages to create (default: 0, means all)
  limit: 0
  
  # Optional, defines the field that the posts should be sorted on (omit to default to 'date')
  sort_field: 'date'

  # Optional, sorts the posts in reverse order (omit to default decending or sort_reverse: true)
  sort_reverse: true

  # Optional, the default category to use, omit or just leave this as 'posts' to get a backwards-compatible behavior (all posts)
  category: 'posts'

  # Optional, the default tag to use, omit to disable
  tag: ''

  # Optional, the default locale to use, omit to disable (depends on a field 'locale' to be specified in the posts, 
  # in reality this can be any value, suggested are the Microsoft locale-codes (e.g. en_US, en_GB) or simply the ISO-639 language code )
  locale: '' 

 # Optional,omit or set both before and after to zero to disable. 
 # Controls how the pagination trail for the paginated pages look like. 
  trail: 
    before: 2
    after: 2

  # Optional, the default file extension for generated pages (e.g html, json, xml).
  # Internally this is set to html by default
  extension: html

  # Optional, the default name of the index file for generated pages (e.g. 'index.html')
  # Without file extension
  indexpage: 'index'

############################################################

Also ensure that you remove the old 'jekyll-paginate' gem from your gems list and add this new gem instead

gems: [jekyll-paginate-v2]

Page configuration

To enable pagination on a page then simply include the minimal pagination configuration in the page front-matter:

---
layout: page
pagination: 
  enabled: true
---

Then you can use the normal paginator.posts logic to iterate through the posts.

{% for post in paginator.posts %}
  <h1>{{ post.title }}</h1>
{% endfor %}

And to display pagination links, simply

{% if paginator.total_pages > 1 %}
<ul>
  {% if paginator.previous_page %}
  <li>
    <a href="{{ paginator.previous_page_path | prepend: site.baseurl }}">Newer</a>
  </li>
  {% endif %}
  {% if paginator.next_page %}
  <li>
    <a href="{{ paginator.next_page_path | prepend: site.baseurl }}">Older</a>
  </li>
  {% endif %}
</ul>
{% endif %}

All posts that have the hidden: true in their front matter are ignored by the pagination logic.

Following fields area available on the paginator object

Field Description
per_page Maximum number of posts or documents on each pagination page.
posts The list of post objects that belong to this pagination page.
total_posts Total number of posts included in pagination.
total_pages Total number of pagination pages created.
page Number of the current pagination page.
page_path The relative Url path of the current pagination page.
previous_page Number of the previous page in the pagination. Nil if no previous page is available.
previous_page_path The relative Url of the previous page. Nil if no previous page is available.
next_page Number of the next page in the pagination. Nil if there is no next page available.
next_page_path The relative Url of the next page in the pagination. Nil if there is no next page available.
first_page Number of the first page in the pagination (usually this is 1).
first_page_path The relative Url of the first page in the pagination.
last_page Number of the last page in the pagination (this is equal to total_pages).
last_page_path The relative Url of the last page in the pagination.
page_trail The pagination trail structure

The code is fully backwards compatible and you will have access to all the normal paginator variables defined in the official jekyll documentation.

Neat! 👌

Don't delay, go see the Examples, they're way more useful than read-me docs at this point :)

Backwards compatibility with jekyll-paginate

This gem is fully backwards compatible with the old jekyll-paginate gem and can be used as a zero-configuration replacement for it. If the old site config is detected then the gem will fall back to the old logic of pagination.

You cannot run both the new pagination logic and the old one at the same time

The following _config.yml settings are honored when running this gem in compatability mode

paginate: 8
paginate_path: "/legacy/page:num/"

See more about the old style of pagination at the jekyll-paginate page.

‼️ Warning Backwards compatibility with the old jekyll-paginate gem is currently scheduled to be removed after 1st January 2018. Users will start receiving warning log messages when running jekyll two months before this date.

Paginating collections

By default the pagination system only paginates posts. If you only have posts and pages in your site you don't need to worry about a thing, everything will work as intended without you configuring anything.

However if you use document collections, or would like to, then this pagination gem offers extensive support for paginating documents in one or more collections at the same time.

Collections are groups of documents that belong together but should not be grouped by date. See more about 'collections' on Ben Balters blog.

Paginating a single collection

Lets expand on Ben's collection discussion (linked above). Let's say that you have hundreds of cupcake pages in your cupcake collection. To create a pagination page for only documents from the cupcake collection you would do this

---
layout: page
title: All Cupcakes
pagination: 
  enabled: true
  collection: cupcakes
---

Paginating multiple collections

Lets say that you want to create a single pagination page for only small cakes on your page (you have both cupcakes and cookies to sell). You could do that like this

---
layout: page
title: Lil'bits
pagination: 
  enabled: true
  collection: cupcakes, cookies
---

The special 'all' collection

Now your site has grown and you have multiple cake collections on it and you want to have a single page that paginates all of your collections at the same time. You can use the special all collection name for this.

---
layout: page
title: All the Cakes!
pagination: 
  enabled: true
  collection: all
---

Note: Due to the all keyword being reserved for this feature, you cannot have a collection called all in your site configuration. Sorry.

Paginate categories, tags, locales

Enabling pagination for specific categories, tags or locales is as simple as adding values to the pagination page front-matter and corresponding values in the posts.

Filtering categories

Filter single category 'software'

---
layout: post
pagination: 
  enabled: true
  category: software
---

Filter multiple categories (lists only posts belonging to all categories)

pagination: 
  enabled: true
  category: software, ruby

To define categories you can either specify them in the front-matter or through the directory structure of your jekyll site (Categories are derived from the directory structure above the _posts directory). You can actually use both approaches to assign your pages to multiple categories.

Filtering tags

Filter on a single tag

pagination: 
  enabled: true
  tag: cool

Filter on multiple tags

pagination: 
  enabled: true
  tag: cool, life

When specifying tags in your posts make sure that the values are not enclosed in single quotes (double quotes are fine). If they are you will get a cryptic error when generating your site that looks like "Error: could not read file : did not find expected key while parsing a block mapping at line 2 column 1"

Filtering locales

In the case your site offers multiple languages you can include a locale item in your post front matter. The paginator can then use this value to filter on

The category page front-matter would look like this

pagination: 
  enabled: true
  locale: en_US

Then for the relevant posts, include the locale variable in their front-matter

locale: en_US

Paginate on combination of filters

Including only posts from categories 'ruby' and 'software' written in English

pagination: 
  enabled: true
  category: software, ruby
  locale: en_US, en_GB, en_WW

Only showing posts tagged with 'cool' and in category 'cars'

pagination: 
  enabled: true
  category: cars
  tag: cool

... and so on and so on

Configuration overrides

All of the configuration elements from the _config.yml file can be overwritten in the pagination pages. E.g. if you want one category page to have different permalink structure simply override the item like so

pagination: 
  enabled: true
  category: cars
  permalink: '/cars/:num/'

Overriding sorting to sort by the post title in ascending order for another paginated page could be done like so

pagination: 
  enabled: true
  category: ruby
  sort_field: 'title'
  sort_reverse: false

Offsetting posts

The paging logic can be instructed to exclude the first N number of newest posts from the pagination. This can be useful in situations where your site treats the first N posts differently from the rest (e.g. a featured post that is always present).

The number of pages to skip is configured using the offset setting like so

pagination: 
  enabled: true
  offset: 3

This example skips the 3 newest posts from the pagination logic.

Advanced Sorting

Sorting can be done by any field that is available in the post front-matter. You can even sort by nested fields.

When sorting by nested fields separate the fields with a colon : character.

As an example, assuming all your posts have the following front-matter

---
layout: post
author:
  name: 
    first: "John"
    last: "Smith"
  born: 1960
---

You can define pagination sorting on the nested first field like so

---
layout: page
title: "Authors by first name"
pagination: 
  enabled: true
  sort_field: 'author:name:first'
---

To sort by the born year in decending order (youngest first)

---
layout: page
title: "Authors by birth year"
pagination: 
  enabled: true
  sort_field: 'author:born'
  sort_reverse: true
---

Creating Pagination Trails

Creating a trail structure for your pagination as shown above can be achieved by enabling the trail configuration and including a little extra code in your liquid templates.

pagination:
  trail: 
    before: 2 # The number of links before the current page
    after: 2  # The number of links after the current page

Your layout file would then have to include code similar to the following to generate the correct HTML structure

{% if paginator.page_trail %}
  {% for trail in paginator.page_trail %}
    <li {% if page.url == trail.path %}class="selected"{% endif %}>
        <a href="{{ trail.path | prepend: site.baseurl }}" title="{{trail.title}}">{{ trail.num }}</a>
    </li>
  {% endfor %}
{% endif %}

See example 3 for a demo of a pagination trail

The trail object exposes three properties:

  • num: The number of the page
  • path: The path to the page
  • title: The title of the page

The algorithm will always attempt to keep the same trail length for all pages (trail length = before + after + 1). As an example if we have only 7 pagination pages in total and the user is currently on page 6 then the trail would look like this

Different number of before and after trail links can be specified. Below is an example of how the yml config below would look like when on the same page 4

pagination:
  trail: 
    before: 1
    after: 3

Detecting generated pagination pages

To identify the auto-generated pages that are created by the pagination logic when iterating through collections such as site.pages the page.autogen variable can be used like so

{% for my_page in site.pages %}
  {% if my_page.title and my_page.autogen == nil %}
    <h1>{{ my_page.title | escape }}</h1>
  {% endif %}
{% endfor %}

In this example only pages that have a title and are not auto-generated are included.

This variable is created and assigned the value page.autogen = "jekyll-paginate-v2" by the pagination logic. This way you can detect which pages are auto-generated and by what gem.

Formatting page titles

The title field in both the site.config and the front-matter configuration supports the following macros.

Text Replaced with Example
:title original page title Page with title: "Index" and paginate config title: ":title - split" becomes <title>Index - split</title>
:num number of the current page Page with title: "Index" and paginate config title: ":title (page :num)" the second page becomes <title>Index (page 2)</title>
:max total number of pages Page with paginate config title: ":num of :max" the third page of 10 will become <title>3 of 10</title>"

Reading pagination meta information

Each pagination page defines an information structure pagination_info that is available to the liquid templates. This structure contains meta information for the pagination process, such as current pagination page and the total number of paginated pages.

The following fields are available

Field Description
curr_page The number of the current pagination page
total_pages The total number of pages in this pagination

Below is an example on how to print out a "Page x of n" in the pagination layout

<h2>Page {{page.pagination_info.curr_page}} of {{page.pagination_info.total_pages}}</h2>

Generating a JSON API

Delivering content via an API is useful, for a lot of the same reasons that pagination is useful. We want to delivery content, in such a way, that is:

  1. Easy for the user to consume.
  2. Easy for the browser to load.

Paginating content meets both of these requirements, but developers are limited to presenting content statically rather than dynamically. Some example of dynamic content delivery are:

  • Pop up modals
  • Infinite scrolling
  • Multi-tiered pagination (e.g. Netflix UI horizontal scrolling for multiple movie categories)

So how do I generate a JSON API for Jekyll?

First, create a new jekyll page and set its layout to null to avoid any extra html to show up.

Next, use the extension and indexpage option to customize the output of the page and its paginated content as JSON files.

Note that the indexpage field also supports the same macros as the permalink field

Here's an example page:

---
layout: null
permalink: /api
pagination:
  permalink: ''
  enabled: true
  extension: .json
  indexpage: 'feed-:num'
---

{
  "pages": [{% for post in paginator.posts %}
    {% if forloop.first != true %},{% endif %}
    {
      "title": "{{ post.title }}",
      "link": "{{ post.url }}"
    }{% endfor %}
  ]
}

Next, run jekyll build. This will generate a set of paginated JSON files under the folder /api. These JSON files can be loaded via Javascript/AJAX to dynamically load content into your site.

Below's an example set of routes that the configuration would generate:

And here is an example of one of the feed.json files that are created given the markup above

{
  "pages": [
    {
      "title": "Narcisse Snake Pits",
      "link": "/2016/11/narcisse-snake-pits.html"
    },{
      "title": "Luft-Fahrzeug-Gesellschaft",
      "link": "/2016/11/luft-fahrzeug-gesellschaft.html"
    },{
      "title": "Rotary engine",
      "link": "/2016/11/rotary-engine.html"
    }
  ], 
  "next": "/api/feed-11.json",
  "prev": "/api/feed-9.json",
  "first": "/api/feed-1.json"
}

For further information see Example 4, that project can serve as a starting point for your experiments with this feature.

How did you generate those 'next', 'prev' and 'first' links?

All the normal paginator variables can be used in these JSON feed files. You can use them to achive quite powerful features such as pre-loading and detecting when there are no more feeds to load.

{% if paginator.next_page %}
  ,"next": "{{ paginator.next_page_path }}"
  {% endif %}
  {% if paginator.last_page %}
  ,"prev": "{{ paginator.last_page_path }}"
  {% endif %}
  {% if paginator.first_page %}
  ,"first": "{{ paginator.first_page_path }}"
  {% endif %}

Renaming pagination file names

By default the pagination system creates all paginated pages as index.html. The system provides an option to override this name and file extension with the

  indexpage: index
  extension: html

If you wanted to generate all pagination files as default.htm then the settings should be configured as follows

  indexpage: default
  extension: htm

Common issues

I keep getting a dependency error when running jekyll serve after installing this gem

Dependency Error: Yikes! It looks like you don't have jekyll-paginate-v2 or one of its dependencies installed...

Check your Gemfile in the site root. Ensure that the jekyll-paginate-v2 gem is present in the jekyll_plugins group like the example below. If this group is missing add to the file.

group :jekyll_plugins do
  gem "jekyll-paginate-v2"
end

I'm getting a bundler error after upgrading the gem (Bundler::GemNotFound)

bundler/spec_set.rb:95:in `block in materialize': Could not find jekyll-paginate-v2-1.0.0 in any of the sources (Bundler::GemNotFound)

Delete your Gemfile.lock file and try again.

I'm getting a bundler error after upgrading the gem (Gem::LoadError)

bundler/runtime.rb:40:in 'block in setup': You have already activated addressable 2.5.0, but your Gemfile requires addressable 2.4.0. Prepending bundle exec to your command may solve this. (Gem::LoadError)

Delete your Gemfile.lock file and try again.

My pagination pages are not being found (Couldn't find any pagination page. Skipping pagination)

Pagination: Is enabled, but I couldn't find any pagination page. Skipping pagination...

  • Ensure that you have the correct minimum front-matter in the pagination pages
pagination:
  enabled: true
  • You can place pagination logic into either the pages or liquid templates (templates are stored under the _layouts/ and _includes/ folders).

My pages are being nested multiple levels deep

When using categories for posts it is advisable to explicitly state a permalink structure in your _config.yml file.

permalink: /:year/:month/:title.html

This is because the default behavior in Jekyll is to nest pages for every category that they belong to and Jekyll unfortunately does not understand multi-categories separated with , or ; but instead does all separation on [space] only.

My pagination pages are overwriting each others pages

If you specify multiple pages that paginate in the site root then you must give them unique and separate pagination permalink. This link is set in the pagination page front-matter like so

pagination:
  enabled: true
  permalink: '/cars/:num/'

Make absolutely sure that your pagination permalink paths do not clash with any other paths in your final site. For simplicity it is recommended that you keep all custom pagination (non root index.html) in a single or multiple separate sub folders under your site root.