ref: 718e09ed4bc538f4fccc4337f99e9eb86aea31f3
dir: /docs/content/en/templates/section-templates.md/
--- title: Section Page Templates linktitle: Section Templates description: Templates used for section pages are **lists** and therefore have all the variables and methods available to list pages. date: 2017-02-01 publishdate: 2017-02-01 lastmod: 2017-02-01 categories: [templates] keywords: [lists,sections,templates] menu: docs: parent: "templates" weight: 40 weight: 40 sections_weight: 40 draft: false aliases: [/templates/sections/] toc: true --- ## Add Content and Front Matter to Section Templates To effectively leverage section page templates, you should first understand Hugo's [content organization](/content-management/organization/) and, specifically, the purpose of `_index.md` for adding content and front matter to section and other list pages. ## Section Template Lookup Order See [Template Lookup](/templates/lookup-order/). ## Page Kinds Every `Page` in Hugo has a `.Kind` attribute. {{% page-kinds %}} ## `.Site.GetPage` with Sections `Kind` can easily be combined with the [`where` function][where] in your templates to create kind-specific lists of content. This method is ideal for creating lists, but there are times where you may want to fetch just the index page of a single section via the section's path. The [`.GetPage` function][getpage] looks up an index page of a given `Kind` and `path`. You can call `.Site.GetPage` with two arguments: `kind` (one of the valid values of `Kind` from above) and `kind value`. Examples: - `{{ .Site.GetPage "section" "posts" }}` - `{{ .Site.GetPage "page" "search" }}` ## Example: Creating a Default Section Template {{< code file="layouts/_default/section.html" download="section.html" >}} {{ define "main" }} <main> {{ .Content }} <ul class="contents"> {{ range .Paginator.Pages }} <li>{{.Title}} <div> {{ partial "summary.html" . }} </div> </li> {{ end }} </ul> {{ partial "pagination.html" . }} </main> {{ end }} {{< /code >}} ### Example: Using `.Site.GetPage` The `.Site.GetPage` example that follows assumes the following project directory structure: ``` . └── content ├── blog │ ├── _index.md # "title: My Hugo Blog" in the front matter │ ├── post-1.md │ ├── post-2.md │ └── post-3.md └── events #Note there is no _index.md file in "events" ├── event-1.md └── event-2.md ``` `.Site.GetPage` will return `nil` if no `_index.md` page is found. Therefore, if `content/blog/_index.md` does not exist, the template will output the section name: ``` <h1>{{ with .Site.GetPage "section" "blog" }}{{ .Title }}{{ end }}</h1> ``` Since `blog` has a section index page with front matter at `content/blog/_index.md`, the above code will return the following result: ``` <h1>My Hugo Blog</h1> ``` If we try the same code with the `events` section, however, Hugo will default to the section title because there is no `content/events/_index.md` from which to pull content and front matter: ``` <h1>{{ with .Site.GetPage "section" "events" }}{{ .Title }}{{ end }}</h1> ``` Which then returns the following: ``` <h1>Events</h1> ``` [contentorg]: /content-management/organization/ [getpage]: /functions/getpage/ [lists]: /templates/lists/ [lookup]: /templates/lookup-order/ [where]: /functions/where/ [sections]: /content-management/sections/