title: Blog --- summary: Shows how to build a basic blog with Lektor. --- body: Blogging is what spawned many content management systems and static site generators. We're living in a world where many people like to share what's on their minds and the best way to do that turns out to be pages ordered by the date of publication. That's basically what a blog is. Here we will build our own blog with Lektor. ## The Models For a blog we want two models. The model for the `blog` itself and the model for the `blog-post`. The idea is that we have a folder called `blog` which uses the `blog` model which contains all the blog posts. Each of the blog posts will use the `blog-post` model. ### `blog.ini` This is the model for the blog itself. It instructs Lektor that all of the pages below it will be blog posts, how many blog posts we want to show per page and what the order is. We also set it to `hidden` and `protected` which will make it unavailable in the admin (`hidden`) for new pages and make it impossible to delete (`protected`). This means we need to manually create the one page later which will use this. ```ini [model] name = Blog label = Blog hidden = yes protected = yes [children] model = blog-post order_by = -pub_date, title [pagination] enabled = yes per_page = 10 ``` ### `blog-post.ini` Each blog post has a title, publication date, author and body. The publication date and title are also used for sorting if you look into the `blog.ini`. Lastly we set up the label of the page to be the title of the blog post. We can also set it to `hidden` as the model is automatically selected in the admin whenever a page is created in the blog. ```ini [model] name = Blog Post label = {{ this.title }} hidden = yes [fields.title] label = Title type = string size = large [fields.pub_date] label = Publication date type = date width = 1/2 [fields.author] label = Author type = string width = 1/2 [fields.body] label = Body type = markdown ``` ## The Templates Now that we have the models set up, we want to create the templates. ### `blog.html` Let's start with the blog overview page. This template is used for our `blog` model. In this example we just want to show the titles of the post on the overview page with the author and date and a controller for the pagination. Because pagination is enabled we can iterate over `this.pagination.items` instead of `this.children` which will return only the items for the intended page. ```html+jinja {% extends "layout.html" %} {% from "macros/pagination.html" import render_pagination %} {% block title %}My Blog{% endblock %}

My Blog

{% if this.pagination.pages > 1 %} {{ render_pagination(this.pagination) }} {% endif %} {% endblock %} ``` For the pagination macro have a look at the [pagination guide :ref](../pagination/) which covers that part. ### `blog-post.html` Now we just need a template for our blog post. This (`blog-post.html`) will do: ```html+jinja {% extends "layout.html" %} {% block title %}{{ this.title }} | My Blog{% endblock %} {% block body %}

{{ this.title }}

by {{ this.author }} on {{ this.pub_date|dateformat('full') }}

{{ this.body }}
{% endblock %} ``` ## Initializing The Blog Now that we have models and templates we just need to designate a part of the website as blog. For that create a new folder in your `content/` folder with the name of your blog. For instance just `content/blog` and put a `contents.lr` file with this content in: ``` _model: blog ``` Now you can head to the admin UI to create new blog posts. ## Changing the URL Structure With the above settings the blog will live at `blog/` and the posts at `blog/`. But what if you want to put the date of the blog post into the URL? That's thankfully very easy. All you need to do is to set up a new URL format for the children. Just edit `blog.ini` and add this to the `[children]` section: ```ini slug_format = {{ (this.pub_date|dateformat('YYYY/M/') if this.pub_date) ~ this._id }} ``` What this does is that it will prepend the year (`YYYY`) and month (`M`) to the ID of the page if the publication date is configured. Otherwise it will just use the ID of the page. With this change our blog post will move from for instance `blog/hello/` to `blog/2015/12/hello/`.