10

I would like to include a snippet in a template but only if the snippet file exist. Is there any way I can do it?

Now I'm just using:

{% include 'snippetName' %}

But this throws the error:

Liquid error: Could not find asset snippets/snippetName.liquid

The reason I need such a functionality is because I have a background process that adds the snippet later on.

6 Answers 6

24

Had this problem myself. This was my solution:

{% capture the_snippet_content %}{% include the_snippet %}{% endcapture %}
{% unless the_snippet_content contains "Liquid error" %}
  {% include reviews_snippet %}
{% endunless %}

Basically capture the snippet’s content as a variable. If there is no snippet Shopify generates the error:

Liquid error: Could not find asset snippets/caroline-flint-reviews.liquid

So check to see if it’s generated that… if so don’t print the snippet :D

Of course this would break if you intended your snippet to include "Liquid error" or if Shopify ever change the error message.

1
  • So useful. Wound up using this to make a snippet routing system based off of handles
    – Leland
    Mar 23, 2017 at 4:46
4

Extending on Jon's answer;

Create a file called snippet.liquid

{% capture snippet_content %}{% include snippet %}{% endcapture %}
{% unless snippet_content contains "Liquid error" %}
  {{ snippet_content }}
{% endunless %}

Then when you want to include a file only if it exists

{% include 'snippet' with 'filename_of_include' %}
1
  • Very neat implementation.
    – Carlton
    Feb 13, 2018 at 1:50
4

Okay, Coming here in 2021.

The include syntax is deprecated and infrequently used, also extending @a.wmly answer, this should be the latest syntax replacing include with render:

{% capture snippet_content %}{% render 'your-snippet-name' %}{% endcapture %}
{% if snippet_content contains "Could not find asset" %}
    {% comment %} do nothing {% endcomment %}
{% else %}
    {% render 'your-snippet-name' %}
{% endif %}

references for include vs render : https://shopify.dev/docs/themes/liquid/reference/tags/deprecated-tags#include

1

Alternatively, you could create your own tag which does a check on the existence of the file, before attempting to process it.

https://github.com/Shopify/liquid/wiki/Liquid-for-Programmers#create-your-own-tags

1
  • 1
    You can create your own tags if you manage your liquid from the 'roots'. Shopify has all the tags defined and you can't create new ones. Jun 27, 2014 at 23:35
0

@vovafeldman Not sure why you can't have a blank snippet, but there's no file exists.

The only other option I can think of is since you are using a BG process to generate the snippet (and I assume upload it), you can always use the template API to upload the version of the template that includes the snippet at the same time.

0

Using the code listed above by Jon or a.wmly both still gave me errors. However, simply writing

{% include 'snippet_name' %}

worked just fine.

Note that this only worked for files located in the "snippets/" folder. So Templates, for instance, did not work using this method.

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