Contribute to the Hugo Docs
Create Your Fork
It’s best to make changes to the Hugo docs on your local machine to check for consistent visual styling. Make sure you’ve created a fork of hugoDocs on GitHub and cloned the repository locally on your machine. For more information, you can see GitHub’s documentation on “forking” or follow along with Hugo’s development contribution guide.
You can then create a separate branch for your additions. Be sure to choose a descriptive branch name that best fits the type of content. The following is an example of a branch name you might use for adding a new website to the showcase:
git checkout -b jon-doe-showcase-addition
Add New Content
The Hugo docs make heavy use of Hugo’s archetypes feature. All content sections in Hugo documentation have an assigned archetype.
Adding new content to the Hugo docs follows the same pattern, regardless of the content section:
hugo new <DOCS-SECTION>/<new-content-lowercase>.md
Add a New Function
Once you have cloned the Hugo repository, you can create a new function via the following command. Keep the filename lowercase.
hugo new functions/newfunction.md
The archetype for functions according to the Hugo docs is as follows:
---
linktitle: ""
description: ""
categories: [functions]
tags: []
ns: ""
signature: []
relatedfuncs: []
---New Function Required Fields
Here is a review of the front matter fields automatically generated for you using hugo new functions/*:
title- this will be auto-populated in all lowercase when you use
hugo newgenerator. linktitle- the function’s actual casing (e.g.,
replaceRErather thanreplacere). description- a brief description used to populate the Functions Quick Reference.
categories- currently auto-populated with ‘functions` for future-proofing and portability reasons only; ignore this field.
tags- only if you think it will help end users find other related functions
signature- this is a signature/syntax definition for calling the function (e.g.,
apply SEQUENCE FUNCTION [PARAM...]). relatedfuncs- other [templating functions] you feel are related to your new function to help fellow Hugo users.
{{.Content }}- an extended description of the new function; examples are not only welcomed but encouraged.
In the body of your function, expand the short description used in the front matter. Include as many examples as possible, and leverage the Hugo docs code shortcode.
Add Code Blocks
Code blocks are crucial for providing examples of Hugo’s new features to end users of the Hugo docs. Whenever possible, create examples that you think Hugo users will be able to implement in their own projects.
Standard Syntax
Across many pages on the Hugo docs, the typical triple-back-tick Markdown syntax (```) is used. If you do not want to take the extra time to implement the following code block shortcodes, please use standard GitHub-flavored Markdown.
```go-html-template
{{ range site.RegularPages }}
<h2><a href="{{ .RelPermalink }}">{{ .LinkTitle }}</a></h2>
{{ end }}
```
Code Block Shortcode
The Hugo documentation comes with a very robust shortcode for adding interactive code blocks.
code
code is the Hugo docs shortcode you’ll use most often. code requires has only one named parameter: file. Here is the pattern:
{{% code file="smart/file/name/with/path.html" download="download.html" copy="true" %}}
A whole bunch of coding going on up in here!
{{% /code %}}
The following are the arguments passed into code:
file- the only required argument.
fileis needed for styling but also plays an important role in helping users create a mental model around Hugo’s directory structure. Visually, this will be displayed as text in the top left of the code block. download- if omitted, this will have no effect on the rendered shortcode. When a value is added to
download, it’s used as the filename for a downloadable version of the code block. copy- a copy button is added automatically to all
codeshortcodes. If you want to keep the filename and styling ofcodebut don’t want to encourage readers to copy the code (e.g., a “Do not do” snippet in a tutorial), usecopy="false".
Example code Input
This example HTML code block tells Hugo users the following:
- This file could live in
layouts/_default, as demonstrated bylayouts/_default/single.htmlas the value forfile. - This snippet is complete enough to be downloaded and implemented in a Hugo project, as demonstrated by
download="single.html".
{{< code file="layouts/_default/single.html" download="single.html" >}}
{{ define "main" }}
<main>
<article>
<header>
<h1>{{.Title }}</h1>
{{ with .Params.subtitle }}
<span>{{.}}</span>
</header>
<div>
{{.Content }}
</div>
<aside>
{{.TableOfContents }}
</aside>
</article>
</main>
{{ end }}
{{< /code >}}
Example ‘code’ Display
The output of this example will render to the Hugo docs as follows:
{{ define "main" }}
<main>
<article>
<header>
<h1>{{.Title }}</h1>
{{ with .Params.subtitle }}
<span>{{.}}</span>
</header>
<div>
{{.Content }}
</div>
<aside>
{{.TableOfContents }}
</aside>
</article>
</main>
{{ end }}Blockquotes
Blockquotes can be added to the Hugo documentation using typical Markdown blockquote syntax:
> Without the threat of punishment, there is no joy in flight.
The preceding blockquote will render as follows in the Hugo docs:
Without the threat of punishment, there is no joy in flight.
However, you can add a quick and easy <cite> element (added on the client via JavaScript) by separating your main blockquote and the citation with a hyphen with a single space on each side:
> Without the threat of punishment, there is no joy in flight. - [Kobo Abe](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kobo_Abe)
Which will render as follows in the Hugo docs:
Without the threat of punishment, there is no joy in flight. - Kobo Abe
Admonitions
Admonitions are common in technical documentation. The most popular is that seen in reStructuredText Directives. From the SourceForge documentation:
Admonitions are specially marked “topics” that can appear anywhere an ordinary body element can. They contain arbitrary body elements. Typically, an admonition is rendered as an offset block in a document, sometimes outlined or shaded, with a title matching the admonition type. - SourceForge
The Hugo docs contain three admonitions: note, tip, and warning.
note Admonition
Use the note shortcode when you want to draw attention to information subtly. note is intended to be less of an interruption in content than is warning.
Example note Input
{{% note %}}
Here is a piece of information I would like to draw your **attention** to.
{{% /note %}}Example note Output
<aside class="admonition note">
<div class="note-icon">
</div>
<div class="admonition-content"><p>Here is a piece of information I would like to draw your <strong>attention</strong> to.</p>
</div>
</aside>
Example note Display
tip Admonition
Use the tip shortcode when you want to give the reader advice. tip, like note, is intended to be less of an interruption in content than is warning.
Example tip Input
{{% tip %}}
Here's a bit of advice to improve your productivity with Hugo.
{{% /tip %}}Example tip Output
<aside class="admonition tip">
<div class="tip-icon">
</div>
<div class="admonition-content"><p>Here’s a bit of advice to improve your productivity with Hugo.</p>
</div>
</aside>
Example tip Display
warning Admonition
Use the warning shortcode when you want to draw the user’s attention to something important. A good usage example is for articulating breaking changes in Hugo versions, known bugs, or templating “gotchas.”
Example warning Input
{{% warning %}}
This is a warning, which should be reserved for *important* information like breaking changes.
{{% /warning %}}Example warning Output
<aside class="admonition warning">
<div class="admonition-icon">
</div>
<div class="admonition-content"><p>This is a warning, which should be reserved for <em>important</em> information like breaking changes.</p>
</div>
</aside>