+++ title = “Overview” weight = 10 +++
Gutenberg uses the Tera template engine and is very similar to Jinja2, Liquid or Twig.
As this documentation will only talk about how templates work in Gutenberg, please read the Tera template documentation if you want to learn more about it first.
All templates live in the templates
directory and built-in or themes templates can
be overriden by creating a template with same name in the correct path. For example,
you can override the RSS template by creating a templates/rss.xml
file.
If you are not sure what variables are available in a template, you can just stick {{ __tera_context }}
in it
to print the whole context.
A few variables are available on all templates minus RSS and sitemap:
config
: the configuration without any modificationscurrent_path
: the path (full URL without the base_url
) of the current page, never starting with a /
current_url
: the full URL for that pageGutenberg adds a few filters, in addition of the ones already present in Tera.
Converts the given variable to HTML using Markdown. This doesn't apply any of the features that Gutenberg adds to Markdown: internal links, shortcodes etc won't work.
Encode the variable to base64.
Decode the variable from base64.
Gutenberg adds a few global functions to Tera in order to make it easier to develop complex sites.
get_page
Takes a path to a .md
file and returns the associated page
{% set page = get_page(path="blog/page2.md") %}
get_section
Takes a path to a _index.md
file and returns the associated section
{% set section = get_page(path="blog/_index.md") %}
get_url
Gets the permalink for the given path.
If the path starts with ./
, it will be understood as an internal
link like the ones used in markdown.
{% set url = get_url(path="./blog/_index.md") %}
This can also be used to get the permalinks for static assets for example if
we want to link to the file that is located at static/css/app.css
:
{{ get_url(path="css/app.css") }}
In the case of non-internal links, you can also add a cachebust of the format ?t=1290192
at the end of a URL
by passing cachebust=true
to the get_url
function.