@@ -276,3 +276,37 @@ class TestSorter(object): | |||||
q = PyQuery(text) | q = PyQuery(text) | ||||
assert q('span.latest').text() == 'YayYayYay' | assert q('span.latest').text() == 'YayYayYay' | ||||
class TestSorterMeta(object): | |||||
def setUp(self): | |||||
TEST_SITE.make() | |||||
TEST_SITE.parent.child_folder( | |||||
'sites/test_sorter').copy_contents_to(TEST_SITE) | |||||
def tearDown(self): | |||||
TEST_SITE.delete() | |||||
def test_walk_resources_sorted_by_index(self): | |||||
s = Site(TEST_SITE) | |||||
s.load() | |||||
config = { | |||||
"index": { | |||||
"attr": ['meta.index', 'name'] | |||||
} | |||||
} | |||||
s.config.sorter = Expando(config) | |||||
SorterPlugin(s).begin_site() | |||||
assert hasattr(s.content, 'walk_resources_sorted_by_index') | |||||
expected = ["angry-post.html", | |||||
"another-sad-post.html", | |||||
"happy-post.html"] | |||||
pages = [page.name for page in | |||||
s.content.walk_resources_sorted_by_kind()] | |||||
assert pages == sorted(expected, key=lambda f: (File(f).kind, f)) | |||||
@@ -0,0 +1,22 @@ | |||||
<!doctype html> | |||||
<title>not found</title> | |||||
<style> | |||||
body { text-align: center;} | |||||
h1 { font-size: 50px; } | |||||
body { font: 20px Constantia, 'Hoefler Text', "Adobe Caslon Pro", Baskerville, Georgia, Times, serif; color: #999; text-shadow: 2px 2px 2px rgba(200, 200, 200, 0.5); } | |||||
::-moz-selection{ background:#FF5E99; color:#fff; } | |||||
::selection { background:#FF5E99; color:#fff; } | |||||
details { display:block; } | |||||
a { color: rgb(36, 109, 56); text-decoration:none; } | |||||
a:hover { color: rgb(96, 73, 141) ; text-shadow: 2px 2px 2px rgba(36, 109, 56, 0.5); } | |||||
span[frown] { transform: rotate(90deg); display:inline-block; color: #bbb; } | |||||
</style> | |||||
<details> | |||||
<summary><h1>Not found</h1></summary> | |||||
<p><span frown>:(</span></p> | |||||
</details> |
@@ -0,0 +1,8 @@ | |||||
{% extends "base.html" %} | |||||
{% block main %} | |||||
Hi! | |||||
I am a test template to make sure jinja2 generation works well with hyde. | |||||
{{resource.name}} | |||||
{% endblock %} |
@@ -0,0 +1,9 @@ | |||||
{% extends "blog/post.html" %} | |||||
{% block article %} | |||||
{{ lipsum() }} | |||||
{% endblock %} | |||||
{% block aside %} | |||||
{{ lipsum() }} | |||||
{% endblock %} |
@@ -0,0 +1,131 @@ | |||||
--- | |||||
title: An Angry Post | |||||
description: > | |||||
Temper. Temper. Temper. | |||||
created: !!timestamp '2011-01-01 10:00:00' | |||||
index: 1 | |||||
--- | |||||
{% mark excerpt -%} | |||||
To complete the character-study of Mr. Worple, he was a man of extremely | |||||
uncertain temper, and his general tendency was to think that Corky was a poor | |||||
chump and that whatever step he took in any direction on his own account, was | |||||
just another proof of his innate idiocy. I should imagine Jeeves feels very | |||||
much the same about me. | |||||
{%- endmark %} | |||||
So when Corky trickled into my apartment one afternoon, shooing a girl in | |||||
front of him, and said, "Bertie, I want you to meet my fiancée, Miss Singer," | |||||
the aspect of the matter which hit me first was precisely the one which he had | |||||
come to consult me about. The very first words I spoke were, "Corky, how about | |||||
your uncle?" | |||||
The poor chap gave one of those mirthless laughs. He was looking anxious and | |||||
worried, like a man who has done the murder all right but can't think what the | |||||
deuce to do with the body. | |||||
"We're so scared, Mr. Wooster," said the girl. "We were hoping that you might | |||||
suggest a way of breaking it to him." | |||||
Muriel Singer was one of those very quiet, appealing girls who have a way of | |||||
looking at you with their big eyes as if they thought you were the greatest | |||||
thing on earth and wondered that you hadn't got on to it yet yourself. She sat | |||||
there in a sort of shrinking way, looking at me as if she were saying to | |||||
herself, "Oh, I do hope this great strong man isn't going to hurt me." She | |||||
gave a fellow a protective kind of feeling, made him want to stroke her hand | |||||
and say, "There, there, little one!" or words to that effect. She made me feel | |||||
that there was nothing I wouldn't do for her. She was rather like one of those | |||||
innocent-tasting American drinks which creep imperceptibly into your system so | |||||
that, before you know what you're doing, you're starting out to reform the | |||||
world by force if necessary and pausing on your way to tell the large man in | |||||
the corner that, if he looks at you like that, you will knock his head off. | |||||
What I mean is, she made me feel alert and dashing, like a jolly old | |||||
knight-errant or something of that kind. I felt that I was with her in this | |||||
thing to the limit. | |||||
"I don't see why your uncle shouldn't be most awfully bucked," I said to | |||||
Corky. "He will think Miss Singer the ideal wife for you." | |||||
Corky declined to cheer up. | |||||
"You don't know him. Even if he did like Muriel he wouldn't admit it. That's | |||||
the sort of pig-headed guy he is. It would be a matter of principle with him | |||||
to kick. All he would consider would be that I had gone and taken an important | |||||
step without asking his advice, and he would raise Cain automatically. He's | |||||
always done it." | |||||
I strained the old bean to meet this emergency. | |||||
"You want to work it so that he makes Miss Singer's acquaintance without | |||||
knowing that you know her. Then you come along" | |||||
"But how can I work it that way?" | |||||
I saw his point. That was the catch. | |||||
"There's only one thing to do," I said. | |||||
"What's that?" | |||||
"Leave it to Jeeves." | |||||
And I rang the bell. | |||||
"Sir?" said Jeeves, kind of manifesting himself. One of the rummy things about | |||||
Jeeves is that, unless you watch like a hawk, you very seldom see him come | |||||
into a room. He's like one of those weird chappies in India who dissolve | |||||
themselves into thin air and nip through space in a sort of disembodied way | |||||
and assemble the parts again just where they want them. I've got a cousin | |||||
who's what they call a Theosophist, and he says he's often nearly worked the | |||||
thing himself, but couldn't quite bring it off, probably owing to having fed | |||||
in his boyhood on the flesh of animals slain in anger and pie. | |||||
The moment I saw the man standing there, registering respectful attention, a | |||||
weight seemed to roll off my mind. I felt like a lost child who spots his | |||||
father in the offing. There was something about him that gave me confidence. | |||||
Jeeves is a tallish man, with one of those dark, shrewd faces. His eye gleams | |||||
with the light of pure intelligence. | |||||
"Jeeves, we want your advice." | |||||
"Very good, sir." | |||||
I boiled down Corky's painful case into a few well-chosen words. | |||||
"So you see what it amount to, Jeeves. We want you to suggest some way by | |||||
which Mr. Worple can make Miss Singer's acquaintance without getting on to the | |||||
fact that Mr. Corcoran already knows her. Understand?" | |||||
"Perfectly, sir." | |||||
"Well, try to think of something." | |||||
"I have thought of something already, sir." | |||||
"You have!" | |||||
"The scheme I would suggest cannot fail of success, but it has what may seem | |||||
to you a drawback, sir, in that it requires a certain financial outlay." | |||||
"He means," I translated to Corky, "that he has got a pippin of an idea, but | |||||
it's going to cost a bit." | |||||
Naturally the poor chap's face dropped, for this seemed to dish the whole | |||||
thing. But I was still under the influence of the girl's melting gaze, and I | |||||
saw that this was where I started in as a knight-errant. | |||||
"You can count on me for all that sort of thing, Corky," I said. "Only too | |||||
glad. Carry on, Jeeves." | |||||
"I would suggest, sir, that Mr. Corcoran take advantage of Mr. Worple's | |||||
attachment to ornithology." | |||||
"How on earth did you know that he was fond of birds?" | |||||
[My Man Jeeves by PG Wodehouse][MMJ] | |||||
[MMJ]: http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/8164/pg8164.html |
@@ -0,0 +1,85 @@ | |||||
--- | |||||
title: Another Sad Post | |||||
description: > | |||||
Something else sad happened. | |||||
created: !!timestamp '2011-03-01 10:00:00' | |||||
index: 2 | |||||
--- | |||||
{% mark excerpt -%} | |||||
I went and dressed sadly. It will show you pretty well how pipped I was when I | |||||
tell you that I near as a toucher put on a white tie with a dinner-jacket. I | |||||
sallied out for a bit of food more to pass the time than because I wanted it. | |||||
It seemed brutal to be wading into the bill of fare with poor old Bicky headed | |||||
for the breadline. | |||||
{%- endmark %} | |||||
When I got back old Chiswick had gone to bed, but Bicky was there, hunched up | |||||
in an arm-chair, brooding pretty tensely, with a cigarette hanging out of the | |||||
corner of his mouth and a more or less glassy stare in his eyes. He had the | |||||
aspect of one who had been soaked with what the newspaper chappies call "some | |||||
blunt instrument." | |||||
"This is a bit thick, old thing—what!" I said. | |||||
He picked up his glass and drained it feverishly, overlooking the fact that it | |||||
hadn't anything in it. | |||||
"I'm done, Bertie!" he said. | |||||
He had another go at the glass. It didn't seem to do him any good. | |||||
"If only this had happened a week later, Bertie! My next month's money was due | |||||
to roll in on Saturday. I could have worked a wheeze I've been reading about | |||||
in the magazine advertisements. It seems that you can make a dashed amount of | |||||
money if you can only collect a few dollars and start a chicken-farm. Jolly | |||||
sound scheme, Bertie! Say you buy a hen—call it one hen for the sake of | |||||
argument. It lays an egg every day of the week. You sell the eggs seven for | |||||
twenty-five cents. Keep of hen costs nothing. Profit practically twenty-five | |||||
cents on every seven eggs. Or look at it another way: Suppose you have a dozen | |||||
eggs. Each of the hens has a dozen chickens. The chickens grow up and have | |||||
more chickens. Why, in no time you'd have the place covered knee-deep in hens, | |||||
all laying eggs, at twenty-five cents for every seven. You'd make a fortune. | |||||
Jolly life, too, keeping hens!" He had begun to get quite worked up at the | |||||
thought of it, but he slopped back in his chair at this juncture with a good | |||||
deal of gloom. "But, of course, it's no good," he said, "because I haven't the | |||||
cash." | |||||
"You've only to say the word, you know, Bicky, old top." | |||||
"Thanks awfully, Bertie, but I'm not going to sponge on you." | |||||
That's always the way in this world. The chappies you'd like to lend money to | |||||
won't let you, whereas the chappies you don't want to lend it to will do | |||||
everything except actually stand you on your head and lift the specie out of | |||||
your pockets. As a lad who has always rolled tolerably free in the right | |||||
stuff, I've had lots of experience of the second class. Many's the time, back | |||||
in London, I've hurried along Piccadilly and felt the hot breath of the | |||||
toucher on the back of my neck and heard his sharp, excited yapping as he | |||||
closed in on me. I've simply spent my life scattering largesse to blighters I | |||||
didn't care a hang for; yet here was I now, dripping doubloons and pieces of | |||||
eight and longing to hand them over, and Bicky, poor fish, absolutely on his | |||||
uppers, not taking any at any price. | |||||
"Well, there's only one hope, then." | |||||
"What's that?" | |||||
"Jeeves." | |||||
"Sir?" | |||||
There was Jeeves, standing behind me, full of zeal. In this matter of | |||||
shimmering into rooms the chappie is rummy to a degree. You're sitting in the | |||||
old armchair, thinking of this and that, and then suddenly you look up, and | |||||
there he is. He moves from point to point with as little uproar as a jelly | |||||
fish. The thing startled poor old Bicky considerably. He rose from his seat | |||||
like a rocketing pheasant. I'm used to Jeeves now, but often in the days when | |||||
he first came to me I've bitten my tongue freely on finding him unexpectedly | |||||
in my midst. | |||||
[My Man Jeeves by PG Wodehouse][MMJ] | |||||
[MMJ]: http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/8164/pg8164.html |
@@ -0,0 +1,142 @@ | |||||
--- | |||||
title: A Happy Post | |||||
description: > | |||||
Smile. Laugh. | |||||
created: !!timestamp '2011-02-01 10:00:00' | |||||
index: 3 | |||||
--- | |||||
{% mark excerpt -%} | |||||
Lady Malvern was a hearty, happy, healthy, overpowering sort of dashed female, | |||||
not so very tall but making up for it by measuring about six feet from the | |||||
O.P. to the Prompt Side. | |||||
{%- endmark %} | |||||
She fitted into my biggest arm-chair as if it had | |||||
been built round her by someone who knew they were wearing arm-chairs tight | |||||
about the hips that season. She had bright, bulging eyes and a lot of yellow | |||||
hair, and when she spoke she showed about fifty-seven front teeth. She was one | |||||
of those women who kind of numb a fellow's faculties. She made me feel as if I | |||||
were ten years old and had been brought into the drawing-room in my Sunday | |||||
clothes to say how-d'you-do. Altogether by no means the sort of thing a | |||||
chappie would wish to find in his sitting-room before breakfast. | |||||
Motty, the son, was about twenty-three, tall and thin and meek-looking. He had | |||||
the same yellow hair as his mother, but he wore it plastered down and parted | |||||
in the middle. His eyes bulged, too, but they weren't bright. They were a dull | |||||
grey with pink rims. His chin gave up the struggle about half-way down, and he | |||||
didn't appear to have any eyelashes. A mild, furtive, sheepish sort of | |||||
blighter, in short. | |||||
"Awfully glad to see you," I said. "So you've popped over, eh? Making a long | |||||
stay in America?" | |||||
"About a month. Your aunt gave me your address and told me to be sure and call | |||||
on you." | |||||
I was glad to hear this, as it showed that Aunt Agatha was beginning to come | |||||
round a bit. There had been some unpleasantness a year before, when she had | |||||
sent me over to New York to disentangle my Cousin Gussie from the clutches of | |||||
a girl on the music-hall stage. When I tell you that by the time I had | |||||
finished my operations, Gussie had not only married the girl but had gone on | |||||
the stage himself, and was doing well, you'll understand that Aunt Agatha was | |||||
upset to no small extent. I simply hadn't dared go back and face her, and it | |||||
was a relief to find that time had healed the wound and all that sort of thing | |||||
enough to make her tell her pals to look me up. What I mean is, much as I | |||||
liked America, I didn't want to have England barred to me for the rest of my | |||||
natural; and, believe me, England is a jolly sight too small for anyone to | |||||
live in with Aunt Agatha, if she's really on the warpath. So I braced on | |||||
hearing these kind words and smiled genially on the assemblage. | |||||
"Your aunt said that you would do anything that was in your power to be of | |||||
assistance to us." | |||||
"Rather? Oh, rather! Absolutely!" | |||||
"Thank you so much. I want you to put dear Motty up for a little while." | |||||
I didn't get this for a moment. | |||||
"Put him up? For my clubs?" | |||||
"No, no! Darling Motty is essentially a home bird. Aren't you, Motty darling?" | |||||
Motty, who was sucking the knob of his stick, uncorked himself. | |||||
"Yes, mother," he said, and corked himself up again. | |||||
"I should not like him to belong to clubs. I mean put him up here. Have him to | |||||
live with you while I am away." | |||||
These frightful words trickled out of her like honey. The woman simply didn't | |||||
seem to understand the ghastly nature of her proposal. I gave Motty the swift | |||||
east-to-west. He was sitting with his mouth nuzzling the stick, blinking at | |||||
the wall. The thought of having this planted on me for an indefinite period | |||||
appalled me. Absolutely appalled me, don't you know. I was just starting to | |||||
say that the shot wasn't on the board at any price, and that the first sign | |||||
Motty gave of trying to nestle into my little home I would yell for the | |||||
police, when she went on, rolling placidly over me, as it were. | |||||
There was something about this woman that sapped a chappie's will-power. | |||||
"I am leaving New York by the midday train, as I have to pay a visit to | |||||
Sing-Sing prison. I am extremely interested in prison conditions in America. | |||||
After that I work my way gradually across to the coast, visiting the points of | |||||
interest on the journey. You see, Mr. Wooster, I am in America principally on | |||||
business. No doubt you read my book, India and the Indians? My publishers are | |||||
anxious for me to write a companion volume on the United States. I shall not | |||||
be able to spend more than a month in the country, as I have to get back for | |||||
the season, but a month should be ample. I was less than a month in India, and | |||||
my dear friend Sir Roger Cremorne wrote his America from Within after a stay | |||||
of only two weeks. I should love to take dear Motty with me, but the poor boy | |||||
gets so sick when he travels by train. I shall have to pick him up on my | |||||
return." | |||||
From where I sat I could see Jeeves in the dining-room, laying the | |||||
breakfast-table. I wished I could have had a minute with him alone. I felt | |||||
certain that he would have been able to think of some way of putting a stop to | |||||
this woman. | |||||
"It will be such a relief to know that Motty is safe with you, Mr. Wooster. I | |||||
know what the temptations of a great city are. Hitherto dear Motty has been | |||||
sheltered from them. He has lived quietly with me in the country. I know that | |||||
you will look after him carefully, Mr. Wooster. He will give very little | |||||
trouble." She talked about the poor blighter as if he wasn't there. Not that | |||||
Motty seemed to mind. He had stopped chewing his walking-stick and was sitting | |||||
there with his mouth open. "He is a vegetarian and a teetotaller and is | |||||
devoted to reading. Give him a nice book and he will be quite contented." She | |||||
got up. "Thank you so much, Mr. Wooster! I don't know what I should have done | |||||
without your help. Come, Motty! We have just time to see a few of the sights | |||||
before my train goes. But I shall have to rely on you for most of my | |||||
information about New York, darling. Be sure to keep your eyes open and take | |||||
notes of your impressions! It will be such a help. Good-bye, Mr. Wooster. I | |||||
will send Motty back early in the afternoon." | |||||
They went out, and I howled for Jeeves. | |||||
"Jeeves! What about it?" | |||||
"Sir?" | |||||
"What's to be done? You heard it all, didn't you? You were in the dining-room | |||||
most of the time. That pill is coming to stay here." | |||||
"Pill, sir?" | |||||
"The excrescence." | |||||
"I beg your pardon, sir?" | |||||
I looked at Jeeves sharply. This sort of thing wasn't like him. It was as if | |||||
he were deliberately trying to give me the pip. Then I understood. The man was | |||||
really upset about that tie. He was trying to get his own back. | |||||
"Lord Pershore will be staying here from to-night, Jeeves," I said coldly. | |||||
"Very good, sir. Breakfast is ready, sir." | |||||
[My Man Jeeves by PG Wodehouse][MMJ] | |||||
[MMJ]: http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/8164/pg8164.html |
@@ -0,0 +1,90 @@ | |||||
--- | |||||
title: A Sad Post | |||||
description: > | |||||
Something sad happened. | |||||
created: !!timestamp '2010-12-01 10:00:00' | |||||
--- | |||||
{% mark image -%} | |||||
![A Dark Image]([[!!images/dark.png]]) | |||||
{%- endmark %} | |||||
{% mark excerpt -%} | |||||
I went and dressed sadly. It will show you pretty well how pipped I was when I | |||||
tell you that I near as a toucher put on a white tie with a dinner-jacket. I | |||||
sallied out for a bit of food more to pass the time than because I wanted it. | |||||
It seemed brutal to be wading into the bill of fare with poor old Bicky headed | |||||
for the breadline. | |||||
{%- endmark %} | |||||
When I got back old Chiswick had gone to bed, but Bicky was there, hunched up | |||||
in an arm-chair, brooding pretty tensely, with a cigarette hanging out of the | |||||
corner of his mouth and a more or less glassy stare in his eyes. He had the | |||||
aspect of one who had been soaked with what the newspaper chappies call "some | |||||
blunt instrument." | |||||
"This is a bit thick, old thing—what!" I said. | |||||
He picked up his glass and drained it feverishly, overlooking the fact that it | |||||
hadn't anything in it. | |||||
"I'm done, Bertie!" he said. | |||||
He had another go at the glass. It didn't seem to do him any good. | |||||
"If only this had happened a week later, Bertie! My next month's money was due | |||||
to roll in on Saturday. I could have worked a wheeze I've been reading about | |||||
in the magazine advertisements. It seems that you can make a dashed amount of | |||||
money if you can only collect a few dollars and start a chicken-farm. Jolly | |||||
sound scheme, Bertie! Say you buy a hen—call it one hen for the sake of | |||||
argument. It lays an egg every day of the week. You sell the eggs seven for | |||||
twenty-five cents. Keep of hen costs nothing. Profit practically twenty-five | |||||
cents on every seven eggs. Or look at it another way: Suppose you have a dozen | |||||
eggs. Each of the hens has a dozen chickens. The chickens grow up and have | |||||
more chickens. Why, in no time you'd have the place covered knee-deep in hens, | |||||
all laying eggs, at twenty-five cents for every seven. You'd make a fortune. | |||||
Jolly life, too, keeping hens!" He had begun to get quite worked up at the | |||||
thought of it, but he slopped back in his chair at this juncture with a good | |||||
deal of gloom. "But, of course, it's no good," he said, "because I haven't the | |||||
cash." | |||||
"You've only to say the word, you know, Bicky, old top." | |||||
"Thanks awfully, Bertie, but I'm not going to sponge on you." | |||||
That's always the way in this world. The chappies you'd like to lend money to | |||||
won't let you, whereas the chappies you don't want to lend it to will do | |||||
everything except actually stand you on your head and lift the specie out of | |||||
your pockets. As a lad who has always rolled tolerably free in the right | |||||
stuff, I've had lots of experience of the second class. Many's the time, back | |||||
in London, I've hurried along Piccadilly and felt the hot breath of the | |||||
toucher on the back of my neck and heard his sharp, excited yapping as he | |||||
closed in on me. I've simply spent my life scattering largesse to blighters I | |||||
didn't care a hang for; yet here was I now, dripping doubloons and pieces of | |||||
eight and longing to hand them over, and Bicky, poor fish, absolutely on his | |||||
uppers, not taking any at any price. | |||||
"Well, there's only one hope, then." | |||||
"What's that?" | |||||
"Jeeves." | |||||
"Sir?" | |||||
There was Jeeves, standing behind me, full of zeal. In this matter of | |||||
shimmering into rooms the chappie is rummy to a degree. You're sitting in the | |||||
old armchair, thinking of this and that, and then suddenly you look up, and | |||||
there he is. He moves from point to point with as little uproar as a jelly | |||||
fish. The thing startled poor old Bicky considerably. He rose from his seat | |||||
like a rocketing pheasant. I'm used to Jeeves now, but often in the days when | |||||
he first came to me I've bitten my tongue freely on finding him unexpectedly | |||||
in my midst. | |||||
[My Man Jeeves by PG Wodehouse][MMJ] | |||||
[MMJ]: http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/8164/pg8164.html |
@@ -0,0 +1,25 @@ | |||||
<?xml version="1.0"?> | |||||
<!DOCTYPE cross-domain-policy SYSTEM "http://www.adobe.com/xml/dtds/cross-domain-policy.dtd"> | |||||
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<site-control permitted-cross-domain-policies="none"/> | |||||
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<!-- | |||||
<site-control permitted-cross-domain-policies="all"/> | |||||
<allow-access-from domain="*" to-ports="*" secure="false"/> | |||||
<allow-http-request-headers-from domain="*" headers="*" secure="false"/> | |||||
--> | |||||
<!-- | |||||
If you host a crossdomain.xml file with allow-access-from domain=“*” | |||||
and don’t understand all of the points described here, you probably | |||||
have a nasty security vulnerability. ~ simon willison | |||||
--> | |||||
</cross-domain-policy> |
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ | |||||
body{ | |||||
margin: 0 auto; | |||||
width: 960px; | |||||
} |
@@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ | |||||
# www.robotstxt.org/ | |||||
# www.google.com/support/webmasters/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=156449 | |||||
User-agent: * | |||||
@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@ | |||||
<html> | |||||
<body> | |||||
{% block content -%} | |||||
{%- endblock %} | |||||
</body> | |||||
</html> |
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<h1>Posts tagged: {{ tag }} in {{ node.name|title }}</h1> | |||||
<ul> | |||||
{% for resource in walker() -%} | |||||
<li> | |||||
<a href="{{ content_url(resource.url) }}">{{ resource.meta.title }}</a> | |||||
</li> | |||||
{%- endfor %} | |||||
</ul> |
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mode: development | |||||
media_root: media # Relative path from content folder. | |||||
media_url: /media # URL where the media files are served from. | |||||
base_url: / # The base url for autogenerated links. | |||||
plugins: | |||||
- hyde.ext.plugins.meta.MetaPlugin | |||||
- hyde.ext.plugins.auto_extend.AutoExtendPlugin | |||||
- hyde.ext.plugins.sorter.SorterPlugin | |||||
- hyde.ext.plugins.textlinks.TextlinksPlugin | |||||
meta: | |||||
nodemeta: meta.yaml | |||||
created: !!timestamp 2010-01-01 00:00:00 | |||||
extends: root.j2 | |||||
default_block: content |