This Pelican plugin allows Liquid-style tags to be inserted into Markdown within
Pelican documents via tags bounded by {% ... %}
, a convention also used
to extend Markdown in other publishing platforms such as Octopress.
This set of extensions does not actually interface with Liquid, but allows users to define their own Liquid-style tags which will be inserted into the Markdown pre-processor stream. There are several built-in tags, which can be added as follows below.
This plugin can be installed via:
python -m pip install pelican-liquid-tags
For more detailed plugin installation instructions, please refer to the Pelican Plugin Documentation.
While this plugin does provide an extensive set of built-in tags (see below), none of them is imported and made available by default. In order to use specific tags in your post, you need to explicitly enable them in your settings file:
LIQUID_TAGS = ["img", "literal", "video", "youtube",
"vimeo", "include_code"]
Tags do not have access to the full set of Pelican settings, and instead arrange
for the variables to be passed to the tag. Tag authors who plan to add their
tag as an in-tree tag can just add the variables they need to an array in
mdx_liquid_tags.py
. Out-of-tree tag authors can specify which variables they
need by including a tuple of (variable, default value, helptext) via the
appropriate Pelican setting:
LIQUID_CONFIGS = (('PATH', '.', "The default path"), ('SITENAME', 'Default Sitename', 'The name of the site'))
To insert a sized and labeled image in your document, enable the
img
tag and use the following:
{% img [class name(s)] path/to/image [lazy | eager] [width [height]] [title text | "title text" ["alt text"]] %}
The configuration variable IMG_DEFAULT_LOADING
can change the default beahavior
of the plugin. lazy
setting takes precendence over the default eager
.
If lazy
is set, all the images will receive the attribute. This is not the case
with eager
because it's the default behavior of browsers when faced with an image.
Explicit parameters specified in liquid-tags img
will always take precedence
and will always be translated into attributes.
b64img
is based on theimg
tag, but instead of inserting a link to the image, it encodes it as Base64 text and inserts it into an <img src=
attribute.
To use it:
b64img
{% b64img [class name(s)] path/to/image [width [height]] [title text | "title text" ["alt text"]] %}
Images are encoded at generation time, so you can use any local path (just be sure that the image will remain in the same location for subsequent site generations).
To insert a sized and labeled Instagram image in your document by its short-code (such as pFI0CAIZna
), enable the gram
tag and use the following:
{% gram shortcode [size] [width] [class name(s)] [title text | "title text" ["alt text"]] %}
You can specify a size with t
, m
, or l
.
To insert a Flickr image to a post, follow these steps:
flickr
FLICKR_API_KEY
to your settings fileAdd this to your source document:
{% flickr image_id [small|medium|large] ["alt text"|'alt text'] %}
To insert a GIF from Giphy in a post, follow these steps:
giphy
GIPHY_API_KEY
to your settings fileAdd this to your source document:
{% giphy gif_id ["alt text"|'alt text'] %}
To insert a Soundcloud widget in your content, follow these steps:
soundcloud
Add this to your source document:
{% soundcloud track_url %}
To insert a YouTube video into your content, enable the
youtube
plugin and add the following to your source document:
{% youtube youtube_id [width] [height] %}
The width and height are in pixels and are optional. If they are not specified, then the dimensions will be 640 (wide) by 390 (tall).
If you experience issues with code generation (e.g., missing closing tags),
you might need to add SUMMARY_MAX_LENGTH = None
to your settings file.
If you do not want to add 1+ megabyte of JS code to your page, you can embed a
linked thumbnail instead. To do so, set a YOUTUBE_THUMB_ONLY
variable in your
settings file. The YOUTUBE_THUMB_SIZE
variable controls thumbnail dimensions,
with four sizes available:
name | xres | yres |
---|---|---|
maxres | 1280 | 720 |
sd | 640 | 480 |
hq | 480 | 360 |
mq | 320 | 180 |
Embedded thumbnails have CSS class youtube_video
, which can be used to add
a Play button.
If you want to use an invidious.io instance as alternative frontend to YouTube's,
you can set a YOUTUBE_INVIDIOUS_INSTANCE
variable to the domain of the chosen instance.
If you don't have your own instance, you can use one of the public ones.
To insert a Vimeo video into your content, enable the vimeo
plugin and add the following to your source document:
{% vimeo vimeo_id [width] [height] %}
The width and height are in pixels and are optional. If they are not specified, then the dimensions will be 640 (wide) by 390 (tall).
If you experience issues with code generation (e.g., missing closing tags),
you might need to add SUMMARY_MAX_LENGTH = None
to your settings file.
To insert a Speakerdeck viewer into your content, follow these steps:
soundcloud
plugin{% speakerdeck speakerdeck_id [ratio] %}
Notes:
1.33333333333333
(4/3).1.77777777777777
(16/9).To insert HTML5-friendly video into your content, enable the video
plugin and add the following to your source document:
{% video /url/to/video.mp4 [width] [height] [/path/to/poster.png] %}
The width and height are in pixels and are optional. If they are not specified, then the native video size will be used. The poster image is a preview image that is shown prior to initiating video playback. To link to a video file, make sure it is in a static directory, transmitted to your server, and available at the specified URL.
To insert HTML5 audio into a post, enable the audio
plugin
and add the following to your source document:
{% audio url/to/audio [url/to/audio] [url/to/audio] %}
This tag supports up to three audio URL arguments so you can add different audio file versions, as different browsers support different file formats.
To link to an audio file, make sure it is in a static directory, transmitted to your server, and available at the specified URL.
To include code from a file in your document, with optional link to the original
file, enable the include_code
plugin, and add the following to your source
document:
{% include_code path/to/code.py [lang:python] [lines:X-Y] [:hidefilename:] [:hidelink:] [:hideall:] [title] %}
path/to/code.py
is path to file with source code, relative to CODE_DIR
subdirectory
in your content folder. CODE_DIR
is code
by default and can be changed in
your settings file:
CODE_DIR = 'code'
Additionally, in order for the resulting hyperlink to work, this directory must
be listed in the STATIC_PATHS
setting. For example:
STATIC_PATHS = ['images', 'code']
All other arguments are optional but must be specified in the order shown above. Following example will show the first ten lines of the file.
{% include_code path/to/code.py lines:1-10 Test Example %}
To hide the filename, use :hidefilename:
. When that flag is specified, a title
must be provided.
You can hide download links only, while leaving the filename, by adding
:hidelink:
.
If you would like to hide all three (title, filename, and download link),
use :hideall:
.
The following example hides the filename:
{% include_code path/to/code.py lines:1-10 :hidefilename: Test Example %}
To insert an IPython notebook into your post, enable the
notebook
plugin and add the following to your source document:
{% notebook filename.ipynb %}
The file should be specified relative to the notebooks
subdirectory of the
content directory. Optionally, this subdirectory can be specified in your
settings file:
NOTEBOOK_DIR = 'notebooks'
Because the conversion and rendering of notebooks is rather involved, there are a few extra steps required for this plugin. First, you must install IPython:
pip install ipython==2.4.1
After running Pelican on content containing an IPython notebook tag, a file
called _nb_header.html
will be generated in the main directory. The content
of this file should be included in the header of your theme. An easy way to
accomplish this is to add the following to your theme’s header template…
{% if EXTRA_HEADER %}
{{ EXTRA_HEADER }}
{% endif %}
… and in your settings file, include the line:
from io import open
EXTRA_HEADER = open('_nb_header.html', encoding='utf-8').read()
This will insert the proper CSS formatting into your generated document.
The notebook tag also has two optional arguments: cells
and language
.
You can specify a slice of cells to include:
{% notebook filename.ipynb cells[2:8] %}
You can also specify the name of the language that Pygments should use for highlighting code cells. For a list of the language short names that Pygments can highlight, refer to the Pygments lexer list.
{% notebook filename.ipynb language[julia] %}
This may be helpful for those using IJulia
or notebooks in other languages, especially as the IPython project broadens its
scope to support
other languages. The default language for highlighting
is ipython
.
These options can be used separately, together, or not at all. However,
if both tags are used then cells
must come before language
:
{% notebook filename.ipynb cells[2:8] language[julia] %}
The IPython plugin also enables collapsible code input boxes. For this to work
you must first copy the file pelicanhtml_3.tpl
(for IPython 3.x) or
pelicanhtml_2.tpl
(for IPython 2.x) to the top level of your content
directory. Notebook input cells containing the comment line `#
{{ '{%' }} my_liquid_tag arguments {{ '%}' }}
To run the plugin test suite, set up your development environment and run:
cd path/to/liquid_tags
invoke tests
To test the plugin in multiple environments, install and use Tox:
tox
Contributions are welcome and much appreciated. Every little bit helps. You can contribute by improving the documentation, adding missing features, and fixing bugs. You can also help out by reviewing and commenting on existing issues.
To start contributing to this plugin, review the Contributing to Pelican documentation, beginning with the Contributing Code section.
Thanks to Jake Vanderplas for creating this plugin, which has subsequently been enhanced by dozens of contributors.