Collections (using Tags) #
While pagination allows you to iterate over a data set to create multiple templates, a collection allows you to group content in interesting ways. A piece of content can be a part of multiple collections, if you assign the same string value to the tags
key in the front matter.
A Blog Example #
For a blog site, your individual post files may use a tag called post
, but it can be whatever you want. In this example, mypost.md
has a single tag post
:
---
tags: post
title: Hot Take—Social Media is Considered Harmful
---
This will place this mypost.md
into the post
collection with all other pieces of content sharing the post
tag. To reference this collection and make a list of all posts, use the collections
object in any template:
<ul>
{%- for post in collections.post -%}
<li>{{ post.data.title }}</li>
{%- endfor -%}
</ul>
module.exports = function({collections}) {
return `<ul>
${collections.post.map((post) => `<li>${ post.data.title }</li>`).join("\n")}
</ul>`;
};
Example: Navigation Links with an active
class added for on the current page #
Compare the post.url
and special Eleventy-provided page.url
variable to find the current page. Building on the previous example:
<ul>
{%- for post in collections.post -%}
<li{% if page.url == post.url %} class="active"{% endif %}>{{ post.data.title }}</li>
{%- endfor -%}
</ul>
The Special all
Collection #
By default Eleventy puts all of your content (independent of whether or not it has any assigned tags) into the collections.all
Collection. This allows you to iterate over all of your content inside of a template.
Example: A list of links to all Eleventy generated content #
<ul>
{%- for post in collections.all -%}
<li><a href="{{ post.url }}">{{ post.url }}</a></li>
{%- endfor -%}
</ul>
Option: Exclude content from Collections New in v0.8.0 #
In front matter (or further upstream in the data cascade), set the eleventyExcludeFromCollections
option to true to opt out of specific pieces of content added to all collections (including collections.all
, collections set using tags, or collections added from the Configuration API in your config file). Useful for your RSS feed, sitemap.xml
, custom templated .htaccess
files, et cetera.
---
eleventyExcludeFromCollections: true
tags: post
---
This will not be available in `collections.all` or `collections.post`.
Tag Syntax #
You can use a single tag, as in the above example OR you can use any number of tags for the content, using YAML syntax for a list.
A single tag: cat #
---
tags: cat
---
This content would show up in the template data inside of collections.cat
.
Multiple tags, single line #
---
tags: ['cat', 'dog']
---
This content would show up in the template data inside of collections.cat
and collections.dog
.
Multiple tags, multiple lines #
---
tags:
- cat
- dog
---
This content would show up in the template data inside of collections.cat
and collections.dog
.
Collection Item Data Structure #
<ul>
{%- for post in collections.post -%}
<li>{{ post.data.title }}</li>
{%- endfor -%}
</ul>
Note in the above example that we output the post.data.title
value? Similarly, each collection item will have the following data:
inputPath
: the full path to the source input file (including the path to the input directory)fileSlug
: New in v0.5.3 Mapped from the input file name, useful for permalinks. Read more aboutfileSlug
.outputPath
: the full path to the output file to be written for this contenturl
: url used to link to this piece of content.date
: the resolved date used for sorting. Read more about Content Dates.data
: all data for this piece of content (includes any data inherited from layouts)templateContent
: the rendered content of this template. This does not include layout wrappers.
{ inputPath: './test1.md',
fileSlug: 'test1', // fileSlug was added in 0.5.3
outputPath: './_site/test1/index.html',
url: '/test1/',
date: 2018-01-09T04:10:17.000Z,
data: { title: 'Test Title', tags: ['tag1', 'tag2'], date: 'Last Modified' },
templateContent: '<h1>This is my title</h1>\n\n<p>This is content…' }
Sorting #
The default collection sorting algorithm sorts in ascending order using:
- The input file’s Created Date (you can override using
date
in front matter, as shown below) - Files created at the exact same time are tie-broken using the input file’s full path including filename
For example, assume I only write blog posts on New Years Day:
posts/postA.md (created on 2008-01-01)
posts/postB.md (created on 2008-01-01)
posts/post3.md (created on 2007-01-01)
another-posts/post1.md (created on 2011-01-01)
This collection would be sorted like this:
posts/post3.md
posts/postA.md
posts/postB.md
another-posts/post1.md
Sort descending #
To sort descending in your template, you can use a filter to reverse the sort order. For example, in Nunjucks it’d look like this (Liquid also has a reverse
filter built in):
<ul>
{%- for post in collections.post | reverse -%}
<li>{{ post.data.title }}</li>
{%- endfor -%}
</ul>
You should not use Array reverse()
on collection arrays in your templates, like so:
{%- for post in collections.post.reverse() -%}
This will mutate the array and re-order it in-place and will have side effects for any use of that collection in other templates.
Instead, use one of the many template engine utilities provided for you to do this, such as Liquid’s reverse
or Nunjucks’ reverse
This is a Common Pitfall.
Overriding Content Dates #
You can modify how a piece of content is sorted in a collection by changing it’s default date
. Read more at Content Dates.
---
date: 2016-01-01
---
Advanced: Custom Filtering and Sorting #
To get fancier with your collections (and even do a bit of your own custom filtering, if you’d like), you can use our Configuration API.
Inside of your .eleventy.js
config file, use the first argument to the config function (eleventyConfig
below) to call the API (note that module exports is a function and not an object literal):
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
// API is available in `eleventyConfig` argument
return {
// your normal config options
markdownTemplateEngine: "njk"
};
};
You can use eleventyConfig
like so:
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
eleventyConfig.addCollection("myCollectionName", function(collection) {
// get unsorted items
return collection.getAll();
});
};
New in v0.8.0 addCollection
can accept async
functions too. Use await
in your callback to do some asynchronous things!
Return values #
- These
addCollection
callbacks should return an array of template objects (in Eleventy 0.5.2 and prior). - New in v0.5.3
addCollection
callbacks can now return any arbitrary object type and it’ll be available as data in the template. Arrays, strings, objects—have fun with it.
Collection API Methods #
The data collection gets passed to the callback. You can use it in all sorts of ways:
getAll() #
Returns an array.
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
// Unsorted items (in whatever order they were added)
eleventyConfig.addCollection("allMyContent", function(collection) {
return collection.getAll();
});
};
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
// Filter using `Array.filter`
eleventyConfig.addCollection("keyMustExistInData", function(collection) {
return collection.getAll().filter(function(item) {
// Side-step tags and do your own filtering
return "myCustomDataKey" in item.data;
});
});
};
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
// Sort with `Array.sort`
eleventyConfig.addCollection("myCustomSort", function(collection) {
return collection.getAll().sort(function(a, b) {
return b.date - a.date;
});
});
};
Curious where the date is coming from? Read more about Content Dates.
Note that the last example adding the myCustomSort
collection will be available in your templates as collections.myCustomSort
.
getAllSorted() #
Returns an array.
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
// Use the default sorting algorithm (ascending by date, filename tiebreaker)
eleventyConfig.addCollection("allMySortedContent", function(collection) {
return collection.getAllSorted();
});
};
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
// Use the default sorting algorithm in reverse (descending dir, date, filename)
// Note that using a template engine’s `reverse` filter might be easier here
eleventyConfig.addCollection("myPostsReverse", function(collection) {
return collection.getAllSorted().reverse();
});
};
Note that while Array .reverse()
mutates the array in-place, all Eleventy Collection API methods return new copies of collection arrays and can be modified without side effects to other collections. However, you do need to be careful ⚠️ when using Array .reverse()
in templates!
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
// Filter using `Array.filter`
eleventyConfig.addCollection("onlyMarkdown", function(collection) {
return collection.getAllSorted().filter(function(item) {
// Only return content that was originally a markdown file
let extension = item.inputPath.split('.').pop();
return extension === "md";
});
});
};
getFilteredByTag( tagName ) #
Returns an array.
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
// Get only content that matches a tag
eleventyConfig.addCollection("myPosts", function(collection) {
return collection.getFilteredByTag("post");
});
};
getFilteredByGlob( glob ) #
Returns an array. Will match an arbitrary glob (or an array of globs) against the input file’s full inputPath
(including the input directory).
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
// Filter source file names using a glob
eleventyConfig.addCollection("onlyMarkdown", function(collection) {
return collection.getFilteredByGlob("**/*.md");
});
};
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
// Filter source file names using a glob
eleventyConfig.addCollection("posts", function(collection) {
return collection.getFilteredByGlob("_posts/*.md");
});
};
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
// Filter source file names using a glob
eleventyConfig.addCollection("posts", function(collection) {
// Also accepts an array of globs!
return collection.getFilteredByGlob(["posts/*.md", "notes/*.md"]);
});
};
Community Resources
- Working with Collections by Philip Borenstein