77

I have this struct :

type Site struct {
    Name string
    Pages []int
}

I pass an instance of Site to a template.

If I want to write a list of all pages, I do

{{range .Pages}}
    <li><a href="{{.}}">{{.}}</a></li>
{{end}}

Now, what's the simplest way to use the Name field inside the loop (for example to change the href to Name/page) ?

Note that a solution based on the fact that the external object is the global one that was passed to the template would be OK.

3 Answers 3

117

You should know that the variable passed in to the template is available as $.

{{range .Pages}}
    <li><a href="{{$.Name}}/{{.}}">{{.}}</a></li>
{{end}}

(See the text/template documentation under "Variables".)

1
  • What if I have a global variable 123 and inside a range I am trying to use the range's id as a global variable? So confusing... but how could I do this? I tried the following but it didn't quite work... pastebin.com/iAUtiLMq
    – Ari Seyhun
    Jan 8, 2017 at 15:00
18

What about:

{{$name := .Name}}
{{range $page := .Pages}}
    <li><a href="{{$name}}/{{$page}}">{{$page}}</a></li>
{{end}}

Or simply make Pages a map with Name as value?

type Site struct {
    Pages map[string]string
}


{{range $page, $name := .Pages}}
    <li><a href="{{$name}}/{{$page}}">{{$page}}</a></li>
{{end}}
1
  • The first solution is about the same than mine. The second one isn't suited : the name isn't the name of the page but of the site. May 26, 2013 at 8:41
12

It looks like there's no simpler solution than to explicitly declare a variable for the outer object (or its properties) :

{{$out := .}}
{{range .Pages}}
    <li><a href="{{$out.Name}}/{{.}}">{{.}}</a></li>
{{end}}

EDIT : this answer isn't the right one any more, look at chowey's one instead.

7
  • 1
    There's nothing ridiculous about this. I've done this before. It does what it says. Clarity > brevity.
    – JimPaek
    May 28, 2013 at 13:39
  • @JimPaek There's no shortcut to the object that was passed to the template ? May 28, 2013 at 13:51
  • I'm sorry, I think I was wrong. You could do something like: range $index, $page := .Pages and then I believe "." remains the original pipeline of the template. Edit: to be tested
    – JimPaek
    May 28, 2013 at 15:13
  • @JimPaek It doesn't work : you can declare the variables like this but {{.}} is still the iterated value (that is it's equal to $page) and {{.Name}} thus makes a template error. May 28, 2013 at 15:31
  • 1
    @bfrederi note that OP is also the answerer here ;) Aug 5, 2016 at 19:48

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