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#Subcategory Plugin#
This plugin adds support for subcategories in addition to article categories.
Subcategories are hierarchical. Each subcategory has a parent, which is either a
regular category or another subcategory.
Feeds can be generated for each subcategory, just like categories and tags.
##Usage##
###Metadata###
Subcategories are an extension to categories. Add subcategories to an article's
category metadata using a `/` like this:
Category: Regular Category/Sub-Category/Sub-Sub-category
Then create a `subcategory.html` template in your theme, similar to the
`category.html` or `tag.html` templates.
In your templates, `article.category` continues to act the same way. Your
subcategories are stored in the `articles.subcategories` list. To create
breadcrumb-style navigation you might try something like this:
<nav class="breadcrumb">
<ol>
<li>
<a href="{{ SITEURL }}/{{ article.category.url }}">{{ article.category}}</a>
</li>
{% for subcategory in article.subcategories %}
<li>
<a href="{{ SITEURL }}/{{ subcategory.url }}">{{ subcategory.shortname }}</a>
</li>
{% endfor %}
</ol>
</nav>
###Subcategory folders###
To specify subcategories using folders you can configure `PATH_METADATA`
to extract the article path (containing all category and subcategory folders)
into the `subcategory_path` metadata. The following settings would use all available
subcategories for the hierarchy:
PATH_METADATA= '(?P<subcategory_path>.*)/.*'
You can limit the depth of generated subcategories by adjusting the regular expression
to only include a specific number of path separators (`/`). For example, the following
would generate only a single level of subcategories regardless of the folder tree depth:
PATH_METADATA= '(?P<subcategory_path>[^/]*/[^/]*)/.*'
##Subcategory Names##
Each subcategory's full name is a `/`-separated list of it parents and itself.
This is necessary to keep each subcategory unique. It means you can have
`Category 1/Foo` and `Category 2/Foo` and they won't interfere with each other.
Each subcategory has an attribute `shortname` which is just the name without
its parents associated. For example if you had…
Category/Sub Category1/Sub Category2
… the full name for Sub Category2 would be `Category/Sub Category1/Sub Category2` and
the "short name" would be `Sub Category2`.
If you need to use the slug, it is generated from the short name — not the full
name.
##Settings##
Consistent with the default settings for Tags and Categories, the default
settings for subcategories are:
'SUBCATEGORY_SAVE_AS' = os.path.join('subcategory', '{savepath}.html')
'SUBCATEGORY_URL' = 'subcategory/(fullurl).html'
`savepath` and `fullurl` are generated recursively, using slugs. So the full
URL would be:
category-slug/sub-category-slug/sub-sub-category-slug
… with `savepath` being similar but joined using `os.path.join`.
Similarly, you can save subcategory feeds by adding one of the following
to your Pelican configuration file:
SUBCATEGORY_FEED_ATOM = 'feeds/%s.atom.xml'
SUBCATEGORY_FEED_RSS = 'feeds/%s.rss.xml'
… and this will create a feed with `fullurl` of the subcategory. For example:
feeds/category/subcategory.atom.xml
Article urls can also use the values of `subpath` and `suburl` in their
definitions. These are equivalent to the `fullurl` and `savepath` of the most
specific subcategory. If you have articles that don't have subcategories these
values are set to the category slug.
ARTICLE_SAVE_AS = os.path.join('{subpath}' 'articles' '{slug}.html')
ARTICLE_URL = '{suburl}/articles/{slug}.html'