11ty

Eleventy Documentation

This is an older version of Eleventy. Full release history. Go to the newest Eleventy docs. You could try /docs/pagination/ although it may not exist.

Documentation Pages

Pagination #

To iterate over a data set and create pages for individual chunks of data, use pagination. Enable in your template’s front matter by adding the pagination key. Consider this Nunjucks template:

---
pagination:
data: testdata
size: 2
testdata:
- item1
- item2
- item3
- item4

---

<ol>
{%- for item in pagination.items %}
<li>{{ item }}</li>
{% endfor -%}
</ol>

We enable pagination and then give it a dataset with the data key. We control the number of items in each chunk with size. The pagination data variable will be populated with what you need to create each template. Here’s what’s in pagination:

{
items: [], // current page’s chunk of data
pageNumber: 0, // current page number, 0 indexed
nextPageLink: "", // put inside <a href="">Next Page</a>
previousPageLink: "", // put inside <a href="">Previous Page</a>
pageLinks: [], // all page links
data: "", // pointer to dataset
size: 1, // chunk sizes
}

If the above file were named paged.njk, it would create two pages: _site/paged/0/index.html and _site/paged/1/index.html. These output paths are configurable with permalink (see below).

Paging an Object #

All of the examples thus far have paged Array data. Eleventy does allow paging objects too. Objects are resolved to pagination arrays using either the Object.keys or Object.values JavaScript functions. Consider the following Nunjucks template:

---
pagination:
data: testdata
size: 1
testdata:
itemkey1: itemvalue1
itemkey2: itemvalue2
itemkey3: itemvalue3

---

<ol>
{%- for item in pagination.items %}
<li>{{ item }}</li>
{% endfor -%}
</ol>

In this example, we would get 3 pages, with the paged items holding the object keys:

[
[ "itemkey1" ], // pagination.items[0] holds the object key
[ "itemkey2" ],
[ "itemkey3" ]
]

You can use these keys to get access to the original value: testdata[ pagination.items[0] ].

If you’d like the pagination to iterate over the values instead of the keys (using Object.values instead of Object.keys), add resolve: values to your pagination front matter:

---
pagination:
data: testdata
size: 1
resolve: values
testdata:
itemkey1: itemvalue1
itemkey2: itemvalue2
itemkey3: itemvalue3

---

This resolves to:

[
[ "itemvalue1" ], // pagination.items[0] holds the object value
[ "itemvalue2" ],
[ "itemvalue3" ]
]

Paginate a global or local data file #

Read more about Template Data Files. The only change here is that you point your data pagination key to the global or local data instead of data in the front matter. For example, consider the following globalDataSet.json file in your global data directory.

{
myData: [
"item1",
"item2",
"item3",
"item4"
]
}

Your front matter would look like this:

---
pagination:
data: globalDataSet.myData
size: 1

---

<ol>
{%- for item in pagination.items %}
<li>{{ item }}</li>
{% endfor -%}
</ol>

Pagination variables also work here. Here’s an example of a permalink using the pagination page number:

---
permalink: different/page-{{ pagination.pageNumber }}/index.html
---

Writes to _site/different/page-0/index.html, _site/different/page-1/index.html, et cetera.

That means Nunjucks will also let you start your page numbers with 1 instead of 0, by just adding 1 here:

---
permalink: different/page-{{ pagination.pageNumber + 1 }}/index.html
---

Writes to _site/different/page-1/index.html, _site/different/page-2/index.html, et cetera.

You can do more advanced things like this:

---
pagination:
data: testdata
size: 1
testdata:
- My Item
permalink: different/{{ pagination.items[0] | slug }}/index.html

---

Using a universal slug filter (transforms My Item to my-item), this outputs: _site/different/my-item/index.html.

Aliasing to a different variable #

Ok, so pagination.items[0] is ugly. We provide an option to alias this to something different.

---
pagination:
data: testdata
size: 1
alias: wonder
testdata:
- Item1
- Item2
permalink: different/{{ wonder | slug }}/index.html

---

You can use the alias in your content too {{ wonder }}.

This writes to _site/different/item1/index.html and _site/different/item2/index.html.

If your chunk size is greater than 1, the alias will be an array instead of a single value.

---
pagination:
data: testdata
size: 2
alias: wonder
testdata:
- Item1
- Item2
- Item3
- Item4
permalink: different/{{ wonder[0] | slug }}/index.html

---

You can use the alias in your content too {{ wonder[0] }}.

This writes to _site/different/item1/index.html and _site/different/item3/index.html.

Blacklisting or Filtering Values #

Use the filter pagination property to remove values from paginated data.

---
pagination:
data: testdata
size: 1
filter:
- item3
testdata:
item1: itemvalue1
item2: itemvalue2
item3: itemvalue3

---

Paginates to:

[
[ "item1" ],
[ "item2" ],
]

This will work the same with paginated arrays or with resolve: values for paginated objects.

---
pagination:
data: testdata
size: 1
resolve: values
filter:
- itemvalue3
testdata:
item1: itemvalue1
item2: itemvalue2
item3: itemvalue3

---

Paginates to:

[
[ "itemvalue1" ],
[ "itemvalue2" ],
]

Paging a Collection #

If you’d like to make a paginated list of all of your blog posts (any content with the tag post on it), use something like the following Liquid/Nunjucks template to iterate over a specific collection:

---
title: My Posts
pagination:
data: collections.post
size: 6
alias: posts

---


<ol>
{% for post in posts %}
<li><a href="{{ post.url | url }}">{{ post.data.title }}</a></li>
{% endfor %}
</ol>

The above generates a list of links but you could do a lot more. See what’s available in the Collection documentation (specifically templateContent). If you’d like to use this to automatically generate Tag pages for your content, please read Quick Tip #004—Create Tag Pages for your Blog.


Related Docs