I'm using Jekyll to create a new blog. It uses Liquid underneath.
Jekyll defines certain "variables": site
, content
, page
, post
and paginator
. These "variables" have several "members". For instance, post.date
will return the date of a post, while post.url
will return its url.
My question is: can I access a variable's member using another variable as the member name?
See the following example:
{% if my_condition %}
{% assign name = 'date' %}
{% else %}
{% assign name = 'ur开发者_开发问答l' %}
{% endif %}
I have a variable called name
which is either 'date'
or 'url'
.
How can I make the liquid equivalent of post[name]
in ruby?
The only way I've found is using a for
loop to iterate over all the pairs (key-value) of post
. Beware! It is quite horrible:
{% for property in post %}
{% if property[0] == name %}
{{ property[1] }}
{% endif %}
{% endfor %}
Argh! I hope there is a better way.
Thanks.
I don't know what I was thinking.
post[name]
is a perfectly valid liquid construction. So the for-if code above can be replaced by this:
{{ post[name] }}
I thought that I tried this, but apparently I didn't. D'oh!
Liquid admits even fancier constructs; the following one is syntactically correct, and will return the expected value if post
, element
, categories
, etc are correctly defined:
{{ post[element.id].categories[1].name }}
I am greatly surprised with Liquid. Will definitively continue investigating.
Actually, this did not work for me. I tried a bunch of different combinations and what finally worked was
<!-- object myObj.test has the string value "this is a test" -->
{% assign x = 'test' %}
{{ myObj.[x] }}
Output: this is a test
精彩评论