# Title: Render Partial Tag for Jekyll # Author: Brandon Mathis http://brandonmathis.com # Description: Import files on your filesystem into any blog post and render them inline. # Note: Paths are relative to the source directory, if you import a file with yaml front matter, the yaml will be stripped out. # # Syntax {% render_partial path/to/file %} # # Example 1: # {% render_partial about/_bio.markdown %} # # This will import source/about/_bio.markdown and render it inline. # In this example I used an underscore at the beginning of the filename to prevent Jekyll # from generating an about/bio.html (Jekyll doesn't convert files beginning with underscores) # # Example 2: # {% render_partial ../README.markdown %} # # You can use relative pathnames, to include files outside of the source directory. # This might be useful if you want to have a page for a project's README without having # to duplicated the contents # # require 'pathname' require './plugins/octopress_filters' module Jekyll class RenderPartialTag < Liquid::Tag include OctopressFilters def initialize(tag_name, markup, tokens) @file = nil @raw = false if markup =~ /^(\S+)\s?(\w+)?/ @file = $1.strip @raw = $2 == 'raw' end super end def render(context) file_dir = (context.registers[:site].source || 'source') file_path = Pathname.new(file_dir).expand_path file = file_path + @file ext = File.extname(@file) unless file.file? return "File #{file} could not be found" end Dir.chdir(file_path) do contents = file.read if contents =~ /\A-{3}.+[^\A]-{3}\n(.+)/m contents = $1.lstrip end contents = pre_filter(contents, ext) if @raw contents else partial = Liquid::Template.parse(contents) context.stack do contents = partial.render(context) site = context.registers[:site] converter = site.converters.find { |c| c.matches(ext) } if converter.nil? contents else converter.convert(contents) end end end end end end end Liquid::Template.register_tag('render_partial', Jekyll::RenderPartialTag)