Reputation: 174948
I am using the YAML heading of a markdown file to add an excerpt
variable to blog posts that I can use elsewhere. In one of these excerpts I refer to an earlier blog post via markdown link markup, and I use the liquid template data variable {{ site.url }}
in place of the base URL of the site.
So I have something like (trimmed it somewhat)
---
title: "Decluttering ordination plots in vegan part 2: orditorp()"
status: publish
layout: post
published: true
tags:
- tag1
- tag2
excerpt: In the [earlier post in this series]({{ site.url }}/2013/01/12/
decluttering-ordination-plots-in-vegan-part-1-ordilabel/ "Decluttering ordination
plots in vegan part 1: ordilabel()") I looked at the `ordilabel()` function
----
However, jekyll and the Maruku md parser don't like this, which makes me suspect that you can't use liquid markup in the YAML header.
Is it possible to use liquid markup in the YAML header of pages handled by jekyll?
The errors I am getting from Maruku are:
| Maruku tells you:
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Must quote title
| ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
| the [earlier post in this series]({{ site.url }}/2013/01/12/decluttering-o
| --------------------------------------|-------------------------------------
| +--- Byte 40
and
| Maruku tells you:
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Unclosed link
| ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
| the [earlier post in this series]({{ site.url }}/2013/01/12/decluttering-or
| --------------------------------------|-------------------------------------
| +--- Byte 41
and
| Maruku tells you:
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
| No closing ): I will not create the link for ["earlier post in this series"]
| ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
| the [earlier post in this series]({{ site.url }}/2013/01/12/decluttering-or
| --------------------------------------|-------------------------------------
| +--- Byte 41
Upvotes: 43
Views: 14591
Reputation: 3184
Another approach would be to add an IF
statement to your head.html
.
Instead of using page.layout
like I did on my example below, you could use any variable from the page YAML header.
<title>
{% if page.layout == 'post' %}
Some text with {{ site.url }} variable
{% else %}
{{ site.description | escape }}
{% endif %}
</title>
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1
If you need to replace values in data/yml
from another data/yml
file, I wrote plugin. It's not so elegant but works :
I did some code improvements. Now it catch all occurrences in one string and work with nested values.
module LiquidReplacer
class Generator < Jekyll::Generator
REGEX = /\!([A-Za-z0-9]|_|\.){1,}\!/
def replace_str(str)
out = str
str.to_s.to_enum(:scan, REGEX).map {
m = Regexp.last_match.to_s
val = m.gsub('!', '').split('.')
vv = $site_data[val[0]]
val.delete_at(0)
val.length.times.with_index do |i|
if val.nil? || val[i].nil? || vv.nil? ||vv[val[i]].nil?
puts "ERROR IN BUILDING YAML WITH KEY:\n#{m}"
else
vv = vv[val[i]]
end
end
out = out.gsub(m, vv)
}
out
end
def deeper(in_hash)
if in_hash.class == Hash || in_hash.class == Array
_in_hash = in_hash.to_a
_out_hash = {}
_in_hash.each do |dd|
case dd
when Hash
_dd = dd.to_a
_out_hash[_dd[0]] = deeper(_dd[1])
when Array
_out_hash[dd[0]] = deeper(dd[1])
else
_out_hash = replace_str(dd)
end
end
else
_out_hash = replace_str(in_hash)
end
return _out_hash
end
def generate(site)
$site_data = site.data
site.data.each do |data|
site.data[data[0]] = deeper(data[1])
end
end
end
end
place this code in site/_plugins/liquid_replacer.rb
in yml
file use !something.someval!
like as site.data.something.someval
but without site.data
part.
example :
_data/one.yml
foo: foo
_data/two.yml
bar: "!one.foo!bar"
calling {{ site.data.two.bar }}
will produce foobar
======= OLD CODE ======
module LiquidReplacer
class Generator < Jekyll::Generator
REGEX = /\!([A-Za-z0-9]|_|\.){1,}\!/
def generate(site)
site.data.each do |d|
d[1].each_pair do |k,v|
v.to_s.match(REGEX) do |m|
val = m[0].gsub('!', '').split('.')
vv = site.data[val[0]]
val.delete_at(0)
val.length.times.with_index do |i|
vv = vv[val[i]]
end
d[1][k] = d[1][k].gsub(m[0], vv)
end
end
end
end
end
end
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 2013
Today I ran into a similar problem. As a solution I created the following simple Jekyll filter-plugin which allows to expand nested liquid-templates in (e.g. liquid-variables in the YAML front matter):
module Jekyll
module LiquifyFilter
def liquify(input)
Liquid::Template.parse(input).render(@context)
end
end
end
Liquid::Template.register_filter(Jekyll::LiquifyFilter)
Filters can be added to a Jekyll site by placing them in the '_plugins' sub-directory of the site-root dir. The above code can be simply pasted into a yoursite/_plugins/liquify_filter.rb file.
After that a template like...
---
layout: default
first_name: Harry
last_name: Potter
greetings: Greetings {{ page.first_name }} {{ page.last_name }}!
---
{{ page.greetings | liquify }}
... should render some output like "Greetings Harry Potter!". The expansion works also for deeper nested structures - as long as the liquify filter is also specified on the inner liquid output-blocks. Something like {{ site.url }} works of course, too.
Update - looks like this is now available as a Ruby gem: https://github.com/gemfarmer/jekyll-liquify.
Upvotes: 52
Reputation: 25475
I don't believe it's possible to nest liquid variables inside YAML. At least, I haven't figure out how to do it.
One approach that will work is to use a Liquid's replace filter. Specifically, define a string that you want to use for the variable replacement (e.g. !SITE_URL!
). Then, use the replace filter to switch that to your desired Jekyll variable (e.g. site.url
) during the output. Here's a cut down .md file that behaves as expected on my jekyll 0.11 install:
---
layout: post
excerpt: In the [earlier post in this series](!SITE_URL!/2013/01/12/)
---
{{ page.excerpt | replace: '!SITE_URL!', site.url }}
Testing that on my machine, the URL is inserted properly and then translated from markdown into an HTML link as expected. If you have more than one item to replace, you can string multiple replace calls together.
---
layout: post
my_name: Alan W. Smith
multi_replace_test: 'Name: !PAGE_MY_NAME! - Site: [!SITE_URL!](!SITE_URL!)'
---
{{ page.multi_replace_test | replace: '!SITE_URL!', site.url | replace: '!PAGE_MY_NAME!', page.my_name }}
An important note is that you must explicitly set the site.url value. You don't get that for free with Jekyll. You can either set it in your _config.yml
file with:
url: http://alanwsmith.com
Or, define it when you call jekyll:
jekyll --url http://alanwsmith.com
Upvotes: 38