npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

roots-contentful-es2016

v0.0.9

Published

An extension for using roots with the API-driven Contentful CMS, written in ES2016

Downloads

2

Readme

Roots Contentful

Info | Badges -----|------- Version | github release npm version License | npm license Popularity | npm downloads Testing | build status test coverage Quality | dependency status dev dependency status

An extension for using roots with the Contentful CMS API, written in ES2016.

Note: This project is in early development, and versioning is a little different. Read this for more details.

Why Should You Care?

We love static sites. They're fast, resilient, simple, and cheap.

However, managing and updating content on a static site is a pain. This extension allows you to load data from Contentful's API into your roots project for use in your view templates during compilation. Non-developers get an easy way to publish and manage content, while developers can still build static sites in a sane way.

Installation

  • make sure you are in your roots project directory
  • npm install roots-contentful --save
  • modify your app.coffee file to include the extension, as such
contentful = require 'roots-contentful'

# ...

module.exports =
  extensions: [
    contentful
      access_token: 'YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN'
      space_id: 'xxxxxx'
      content_types:
        blog_posts:
          id: 'xxxxxx'
          template: 'views/_post.jade'
          filters: { 'fields.environment[in]': ['staging', 'production'] }
          path: (e) -> "blogging/#{e.category}/#{slugify(e.title)}"
          write: 'data.json'
          sort: compareFunction
          transform: transformFunction
        press_links:
          id: 'xxxxxx'
  ]

# ...

Usage

Accessing Content in Views

A contentful view helper object will be passed into every view containing your content. Each content type will be set as a property on contentful using the name option in your app.coffee configuration. For example with the app.coffee file above, you can access the blog posts like this:

  h1 Hello World
  ul
    - for post in contentful.posts
      li
        h2= post.title
        p= markdown(post.body)

Note: if you have Links in your content more than 10 levels deep (the max for the include parameter), then unresolved links can be returned.

Single Entry Views

If a template option is defined for a Content Type in app.coffee, roots will compile a single page view for each entry in that Content Type collection. The entry will also have a _url key that returns the path to the single page view (so you can create links on an index page for example).

The Entry Object

Contentful's documentation shows the API response when fetching an entry. Your content fields are nested in a fields key on the entry object. As a convenience, the entry object roots-contentful makes available in your views will have the fields key's value set one level higher on the object. System metadata remains accessible on the sys key and roots-contentful will raise an error if you have a field named sys. Inside your views, the entry object will have this structure:

"entry": {
  "title": "Wow. Such title. Much viral",
  "author": "The Doge of Venice"
  # ... the rest of the fields
  "sys": {
    "type": "Entry",
    "id": "cat"
    # ...
  }
}

And can be accessed in your view like this:

  h2= entry.title
  p= markdown(entry.body)

Configuration Options

access_token

Required. Your Contentful Delivery access token (API key).

space_id

Required. The space ID containing the content you wish to retrieve.

preview

Optional. (Boolean) Allows you use the Contentful Preview API. Also able to be accessed by setting the environment variable CONTENTFUL_ENV to "develop" (preview api) or "production" (default cdn).

content_types

An object whose key-value pairs correspond to a Contentful Content Types. Each content type's entries will be set on the contentful locals object using the key used in the config.

Configuring a content_type

Each object in the content_types array can have the following properties:

id

Required. The Content Type's ID on Contentful.

name

Optional. This is the name of the key the entries will be attached to on the contentful object in your views. Defaults to a pluralized, underscored representation of the Content Type name (e.g. 'Blog Post' => contentful.blog_posts)

template

Optional. Path relative to the roots project of a template for a single entry view. Each entry in the Content Type will be passed into the template in an entry variable. If not given, the Content Type will not be compiled into single entry views and will only be attached to the contentful view helper object.

filters

Optional. Takes an object with different filter criteria, see examples of how to structure the object in Contentful's docs.

path

Optional. Provide a function that returns a string of the relative path to the output file for a given entry without the extension. First argument passed into the function is the entry. Default is <name>/<slug> where slug is the slugified output of the entry's displayField (a property of the Content Type), and name is the provided name option above or the default value. This option is ignored if no template is given.

If the function returns an array of paths, the given entry is compiled to multiple files. The array of paths can be accessed with entry._urls. For instance, the configuration below outputs each blog post entry into two folders, en and fr, for i18n purposes:

content_types:
  blog_posts:
    id: 'xxxxxx'
    template: 'views/_post.jade'
    path: (e) -> ("#{lang}/#{slugify(e.title)}" for lang in ['en', 'fr'])

write

Optional. Provide the relative path to the output file that will hold the JSON data of the current content type. The top level JSON object will be an array.

transform

Optional. Provide a function to transform (map) every entry in a content type. The transformed data is then added to the jade locals variable and written to JSON (if the write property is provided). Transform can also return a when.js promise.

transformFunction = (entry) ->
  delete entry.myProperty
  entry

sort

Optional. Provide a standard compare function that will sort all the data of a content type. The data is sorted after it is transformed and before it is provided to the jade locals variable or written as JSON.

compareFunction = (a, b) ->
  # 0           => a and b are equal
  # -1 or less  => a is before b
  # 1 or more   => a is after b
  a.number - b.number

Asset Image Helper

roots-contentful also provides a convenient view helper called asset that allows you to pass in the asset object returned from their API and returns the url. You can also pass in options that will be appended to the image url as a a query string that allows you to specificy size and quality params as documented here.

- for post in contentful.posts
  img(src!= asset(post.image, {w: 100, h: 100, q: 50}))

License & Contributing