ref: 5c0d10045d639ee844535de62866e0a955e89f3d
dir: /docs/content/en/content-management/page-resources.md/
--- title : "Page Resources" description : "Page Resources -- images, other pages, documents etc. -- have page-relative URLs and their own metadata." date: 2018-01-24 categories: ["content management"] keywords: [bundle,content,resources] weight: 4003 draft: false toc: true linktitle: "Page Resources" menu: docs: parent: "content-management" weight: 31 --- Page resources are available for [page bundles]({{< relref "/content-management/page-bundles" >}}) only, i.e. a directory with either a `index.md`, or `_index.md` file at its root. Resources are only attached to the lowest page they are bundled with, and simple which names does not contain `index.md` are not attached any resource. ## Properties ResourceType : The main type of the resource. For example, a file of MIME type `image/jpeg` has the ResourceType `image`. Name : Default value is the filename (relative to the owning page). Can be set in front matter. Title : Default value is the same as `.Name`. Can be set in front matter. Permalink : The absolute URL to the resource. Resources of type `page` will have no value. RelPermalink : The relative URL to the resource. Resources of type `page` will have no value. Content : The content of the resource itself. For most resources, this returns a string with the contents of the file. This can be used to inline some resources, such as `<script>{{ (.Resources.GetMatch "myscript.js").Content | safeJS }}</script>` or `<img src="{{ (.Resources.GetMatch "mylogo.png").Content | base64Encode }}">`. MediaType : The MIME type of the resource, such as `image/jpeg`. MediaType.MainType : The main type of the resource's MIME type. For example, a file of MIME type `application/pdf` has for MainType `application`. MediaType.SubType : The subtype of the resource's MIME type. For example, a file of MIME type `application/pdf` has for SubType `pdf`. Note that this is not the same as the file extension - PowerPoint files have a subtype of `vnd.mspowerpoint`. MediaType.Suffixes : A slice of possible suffixes for the resource's MIME type. ## Methods ByType : Returns the page resources of the given type. ```go {{ .Resources.ByType "image" }} ``` Match : Returns all the page resources (as a slice) whose `Name` matches the given Glob pattern ([examples](https://github.com/gobwas/glob/blob/master/readme.md)). The matching is case-insensitive. ```go {{ .Resources.Match "images/*" }} ``` GetMatch : Same as `Match` but will return the first match. ### Pattern Matching ```go // Using Match/GetMatch to find this images/sunset.jpg ? .Resources.Match "images/sun*" ✅ .Resources.Match "**/sunset.jpg" ✅ .Resources.Match "images/*.jpg" ✅ .Resources.Match "**.jpg" ✅ .Resources.Match "*" 🚫 .Resources.Match "sunset.jpg" 🚫 .Resources.Match "*sunset.jpg" 🚫 ``` ## Page Resources Metadata The page resources' metadata is managed from the corresponding page's front matter with an array/table parameter named `resources`. You can batch assign values using [wildcards](http://tldp.org/LDP/GNU-Linux-Tools-Summary/html/x11655.htm). {{% note %}} Resources of type `page` get `Title` etc. from their own front matter. {{% /note %}} name : Sets the value returned in `Name`. {{% warning %}} The methods `Match` and `GetMatch` use `Name` to match the resources. {{%/ warning %}} title : Sets the value returned in `Title` params : A map of custom key/values. ### Resources metadata example {{< code-toggle copy="false">}} title: Application date : 2018-01-25 resources : - src : "images/sunset.jpg" name : "header" - src : "documents/photo_specs.pdf" title : "Photo Specifications" params: icon : "photo" - src : "documents/guide.pdf" title : "Instruction Guide" - src : "documents/checklist.pdf" title : "Document Checklist" - src : "documents/payment.docx" title : "Proof of Payment" - src : "**.pdf" name : "pdf-file-:counter" params : icon : "pdf" - src : "**.docx" params : icon : "word" {{</ code-toggle >}} From the example above: - `sunset.jpg` will receive a new `Name` and can now be found with `.GetMatch "header"`. - `documents/photo_specs.pdf` will get the `photo` icon. - `documents/checklist.pdf`, `documents/guide.pdf` and `documents/payment.docx` will get `Title` as set by `title`. - Every `PDF` in the bundle except `documents/photo_specs.pdf` will get the `pdf` icon. - All `PDF` files will get a new `Name`. The `name` parameter contains a special placeholder [`:counter`](#the-counter-placeholder-in-name-and-title), so the `Name` will be `pdf-file-1`, `pdf-file-2`, `pdf-file-3`. - Every docx in the bundle will receive the `word` icon. {{% warning %}} The __order matters__ --- Only the **first set** values of the `title`, `name` and `params`-**keys** will be used. Consecutive parameters will be set only for the ones not already set. In the above example, `.Params.icon` is first set to `"photo"` in `src = "documents/photo_specs.pdf"`. So that would not get overridden to `"pdf"` by the later set `src = "**.pdf"` rule. {{%/ warning %}} ### The `:counter` placeholder in `name` and `title` The `:counter` is a special placeholder recognized in `name` and `title` parameters `resources`. The counter starts at 1 the first time they are used in either `name` or `title`. For example, if a bundle has the resources `photo_specs.pdf`, `other_specs.pdf`, `guide.pdf` and `checklist.pdf`, and the front matter has specified the `resources` as: {{< code-toggle copy="false">}} [[resources]] src = "*specs.pdf" title = "Specification #:counter" [[resources]] src = "**.pdf" name = "pdf-file-:counter" {{</ code-toggle >}} the `Name` and `Title` will be assigned to the resource files as follows: | Resource file | `Name` | `Title` | |-------------------|-------------------|-----------------------| | checklist.pdf | `"pdf-file-1.pdf` | `"checklist.pdf"` | | guide.pdf | `"pdf-file-2.pdf` | `"guide.pdf"` | | other\_specs.pdf | `"pdf-file-3.pdf` | `"Specification #1"` | | photo\_specs.pdf | `"pdf-file-4.pdf` | `"Specification #2"` |