Hugo Shortcodes
This page describes shortcodes that we use in Chef documentation.
Shortcodes add short snippets of Hugo code, Markdown, or HTML to a page. For example, the readfile shortcode can add a text file to a page, the note shortcode puts text inside an HTML div, and the automate_cli_commands shortcode reads through YAML files and outputs formatted text from those files.
Notices
Note, warning, and danger notice boxes have a different color than the surrounding text so they can be spotted within a document. If you must use a note or warning, bracket the text of the note or warning in a note, warning, or danger shortcode.
See the notices guidelines for usage recommendations.
Notes
Add a note using the note shortcode:
{{< note >}}
This is the text of a note.
{{< /note >}}
Warnings
Add a warning using the warning shortcode.
{{< warning >}}
This is text in a warning.
{{< /warning >}}
Danger
Add a danger notice using the danger shortcode.
{{< danger >}}
This is text in a warning.
{{< /danger >}}
fontawesome shortcode
The fontawesome shortcode will display any free Font Awesome icon in a page.
It accepts the following parameters:
background-color
border
border-radius
class
color
font-size
margin
padding
The only required parameter is class
, which is the same as the class name of the icon.
The following shortcode examples will display these icons:
{{< fontawesome class="fas fa-ellipsis-h" >}}
{{< fontawesome class="fas fa-anchor" font-size="3rem" border="2px dashed" padding="1px" border-radius="5px" >}}
{{< fontawesome class="fas fa-archive" color="#cc814b" margin="0 0 0 12px">}}
{{< fontawesome class="far fa-address-book" background-color="DarkBlue" color="rgb(168, 218, 220)" >}}
Foundation tabs container
There are four shortcodes that can be combined together to create a container that will allow the user to click on a tab to reveal content in a matching panel. For example, you may want to display matching Ruby and YAML code blocks. You can create two tabs, one titled Ruby and the other YAML, and the user could click on one tab to show the Ruby code block and another tab to show the YAML code block. See the example below.
The four shortcodes are:
foundation_tabs
foundation_tab
foundation_tabs_panels
foundation_tabs_panel
These shortcodes use the Zurb Foundation Tabs component.
The container consists of two parts, the tabs and the panels.
Tabs
Each tab is created with a foundation_tab
shortcode. Use as many foundation_tab
shortcodes as you need to display the number of code blocks or text blocks that
you want the user to be able click on and reveal.
All foundation_tab
shortcodes must be contained within opening and closing foundation_tabs
shortcodes.
For example:
{{< foundation_tabs tabs-id="ruby-python-panel" >}}
{{< foundation_tab active="true" panel-link="ruby-panel" tab-text="Ruby" >}}
{{< foundation_tab panel-link="python-panel" tab-text="Python" >}}
{{< /foundation_tabs >}}
Tab parameters
The foundation_tabs
shortcode has one parameter:
tabs-id
- This value must be identical to the
tabs-id
value in thefoundation_tabs_panels
shortcode, but otherwise it must be a unique HTML ID on the page.
The foundation_tab
shortcode has three parameters:
active
Use
active="true"
to highlight the tab that user will see when they first load the page. Only add this value to one tab. The matchingfoundation_tabs_panel
should also haveactive="true"
in its parameters.panel-link
- This is the value of the panel ID that this tab will link to. This must be identical to
the
panel-id
value in the matchingfoundation_tabs_panel
shortcode. tab-text
- The text in the tab that the user will click on.
Panels
Each tab has a matching panel which is created with foundation_tabs_panel
shortcodes.
The Markdown text that is displayed in each panel must be contained in opening and
closing foundation_tabs_panel
shortcodes.
All foundation_tab_panel
shortcodes must contained within opening and closing
foundation_tabs_panels
shortcodes.
For example:
{{< foundation_tabs_panels tabs-id="ruby-python-panel" >}}
{{< foundation_tabs_panel active="true" panel-id="ruby-panel" >}}
```ruby
puts 'Hello, world!'
```
{{< /foundation_tabs_panel >}}
{{< foundation_tabs_panel panel-id="python-panel" >}}
```python
print('Hello, world!')
```
{{< /foundation_tabs_panel >}}
{{< /foundation_tabs_panels >}}
Panel parameters
The foundation_tabs_panels
shortcode has one parameter:
tabs-id
- This value must be identical to the
tabs-id
value in thefoundation_tabs
shortcode, but otherwise it must be a unique HTML ID on the page.
The foundation_tabs_panel
shortcode has two parameters:
active
- Use
active="true"
to indicate which panel the user will see when they first load the page. This value should also be added to the panels matching tab. Only add this value to one panel. panel-id
- The HTML ID attribute of the panel. This value must be identical to the
panel-link
value in the matchingfoundation_tab
shortcode that will link to this panel. This value must be unique HTML ID on the page.
Example
Below is an example of a container that shows three code blocks in three languages.
You can copy and paste the code below into a page to get started. Note that the tabs-id
and panel-id
/panel-link
values must be unique HTML IDs on the page.
puts 'Hello, world!'
print('Hello, world!')
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
fmt.Println("Hello, world!")
}
{{< foundation_tabs tabs-id="ruby-python-go-panel" >}}
{{< foundation_tab active="true" panel-link="ruby-panel" tab-text="Ruby">}}
{{< foundation_tab panel-link="python-panel" tab-text="Python" >}}
{{< foundation_tab panel-link="golang-panel" tab-text="Go" >}}
{{< /foundation_tabs >}}
{{< foundation_tabs_panels tabs-id="ruby-python-go-panel" >}}
{{< foundation_tabs_panel active="true" panel-id="ruby-panel" >}}
```ruby
puts 'Hello, world!'
```
{{< /foundation_tabs_panel >}}
{{< foundation_tabs_panel panel-id="python-panel" >}}
```python
print('Hello, world!')
```
{{< /foundation_tabs_panel >}}
{{< foundation_tabs_panel panel-id="golang-panel" >}}
```go
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
fmt.Println("Hello, world!")
}
```
{{< /foundation_tabs_panel >}}
{{< /foundation_tabs_panels >}}
readfile shortcode
The readfile shortcode adds text from a file to a page. You can add a Markdown file, HTML file, or code file by specifying the path to the file from the project root directory.
By default it accepts a Markdown file:
{{< readfile file="content/workstation/reusable/md/example.md" >}}
You can also add an HTML file:
{{< readfile file="content/workstation/reusable/html/example.html" html="true" >}}
You can pass in a sample code file:
{{< readfile file="content/workstation/reusable/rb/example.rb" highlight="ruby" >}}
or:
{{< readfile file="content/workstation/reusable/json/example.json" highlight="json" >}}
See the full list of highlighting languages and aliases that Hugo accepts.
relref shortcode
We recommend using Hugo’s built-in relref shortcode for making relative links to other pages in Chef’s documentation. If a link is made to a page that does not exist, the site build will fail when Hugo generates a preview of the site. This will help us prevent dead links in our own documentation if a page is moved or deleted.
To format link to pages:
[link text]({{< relref "some_page" >}})
[link text]({{< relref "section/some_page" >}})
To format links to headings:
[link text]({{< relref "#heading_on_this_page" >}})
[link text]({{< relref "some_page#heading_on_other_page" >}})
[link text]({{< relref "section/some_page#heading_on_other_page" >}})
Note
svg shortcode
The svg shortcode will add an inline SVG icon to a string of text.
The svg shortcode takes one parameter, file
, which is the file path to the SVG file.
For example:
Click on the web asset icon ({{< svg file="themes/docs-new/static/images/web-asset.svg" >}}).
produces:
Click on the web asset icon ( ).
Create a new shortcode
Shortcode files are written in Markdown or HTML and are stored in layouts/shortcodes
or themes/docs-new/layouts/shortcodes
in the chef/chef-web-docs
repository.
In repositories other than chef-web-docs, store shortcodes in layouts/shortcodes/REPOSITORY_NAME/
.
Add a shortcode to a page
There are two types of shortcodes, Markdown and HTML. The type of shortcode determines how it is added to a page and how Hugo processes the text when it renders the page into HTML.
Note
Markdown shortcodes
A Markdown shortcode must be processed into HTML by Hugo when the site is built.
To include a Markdown shortcode in a page, wrap the name of the shortcode file, without the file type suffix, in between double curly braces and percent characters, {{% SHORTCODE %}}
. For example, if you wanted to add the chef.md
shortcode to a page, add the following text to the Markdown page:
{{% chef %}}
For shortcodes located in a repository other than chef-web-docs, use {{% REPO_NAME/SHORTCODE %}}
. For example:
{{% chef-workstation/bento %}}
HTML shortcodes
To include an HTML shortcode in a page, wrap the name of the shortcode file, without the file type suffix, in between double curly braces and angle brackets, {{< SHORTCODE >}}
. For example, add the following text to a page if you wanted to add the chef_automate_mark.html
shortcode:
{{< chef_automate_mark >}}
For shortcodes located in a repository other than chef-web-docs, use {{< REPO_NAME/SHORTCODE >}}
. For example:
{{< automate/automate_cli_commands >}}
Parameters
Some shortcodes accept positioned or named parameters. For example, the example_fqdn
shortcode requires a hostname, which is added like this: {{< example_fqdn "HOSTNAME" >}}
, and produces the following output: HOSTNAME.example.com
.
The Fontawesome Shortcode accepts named parameters. For example, it accepts a class value which is added like this: {{< fontawesome class="fas fa-ellipsis-h" >}}
See the Fontawesome Shortcode section for more examples.
Nested Content
We have some shortcodes that nest around Markdown content that is included in the text of a page. Those shortcodes are all written in HTML. Note the slash /
before the name of the closing shortcode.
{{< shortcode_name >}}
Some Markdown text.
{{< /shortcode_name >}}
See the Notes and Warnings and the Foundation Tabs for examples of nested shortcodes.