--- title: "Hugo's Dictionary API" date: 2022-10-13T10:19:02-07:00 categories: ["Tech"] tags: ["Hugo", "Web", "API Design"] series: "Erynwells.me Development" --- Hugo's templating system has support for dictionaries. Unfortunately the API for working with them is, frankly, awful. While working on developing some new templates for this site, I had to figure out how to build up dictionary data structures and it took me a _long_ time to figure out how to do some basic operations with them. Here's a quick summary of what I found. ## Creating Dictionaries The function to create a dictionary is called [`dict`][dict] and it takes a variable number of arguments that alternate between keys and values. It reminds me of this [bizarre and backwards NSDictionary API][nsdictionary-init] in Apple's Foundation framework. Keys must be strings (or string slices) and values can be anything. So this: {{< figures/code >}} ```go-html-template {{ $d := dict "a" 1 "b" 2 "c" 3 }} ``` {{< /figures/code >}} creates a structure that looks like this JSON object: {{< figures/code >}} ```json { "a": 1, "b": 2, "c": 3 } ``` {{< /figures/code >}} You can also create an empty dictionary by calling `dict` with no arguments. {{< figures/code >}} ```go-html-template {{ $d := dict }} ``` {{< /figures/code >}} ## Accessing Keys and Values Statically, you can get a single item in a dictionary with dot syntax. Below, `$item` will get the value 1. {{< figures/code >}} ```go-html-template {{ $item := (dict "a" 1 "b" 2 "c" 3).a }} ``` {{< /figures/code >}} If you want to get a value with a key you get at render time, you can use the [`index`][index] function. In the snippet below, `$item` will get the value of `"b"`, which is 2. {{< figures/code >}} ```go-html-template {{ $key := "b" }} {{ $item := index $key (dict "a" 1 "b" 2 "c" 3) }} ``` {{< /figures/code >}} `index` doesn't make much sense to me as a verb for accessing values in a dictionary. It sounds more like an array function, and indeed it's the function that gives you access to items in arrays. I would like to see another function with a more dictionary-sounding name, like `get` or `value` or `item`, even if it were just an alias for `index` underneath. ## Adding Items to a Dictionary This is a bit complex because, as far as I can tell, dictionaries are immutable. So, if you want to update a dictionary, you need to combine two dictionaries and then save it back to the original variable. The [`merge`][merge] function does that. Here's a snippet: {{< figures/code >}} ```go-html-template {{ $d := dict "a" 1 "b" 2 "c" 3 }} {{ $d = merge $d (dict "b" 4) }} {{ $item = index "b" $d }} ``` {{< /figures/code >}} `merge` takes a variable number of arguments, and merges dictionaries left to right. So, items in dictionaries later in the argument list will override items in dictionaries earlier in the list. Just to underscore, you have to set the update dictionary back to the original variable to complete the update, hence the `$d = ...`. All that is to say: at the end of that snippet, `$item` will get the value 4. ## A Complex Example: A Dictionary of Arrays For the previously mentioned template changes I was making, I was updating the `terms` template for my category taxonomy. For each category, I wanted to show one section per tag, and a list of all the posts with that tag underneath. My categories are high level groups like "Tech," "Music," and "Travel." Tags are more specific topics for the post like "Web" or "Compositions." Pages only ever have one category but they can have multiple tags. A `terms` template lets you access an array of terms, and the pages associated with those terms. You can access the tags attached to a page with the `.GetTerms` function. Here's what I did, and then I'll talk through it: {{< figures/code >}} ```go-html-template {{- $pagesByTag := dict -}} {{- range $page := .Pages -}} {{- range $tag := .GetTerms "tags" -}} {{- $tagName := $tag.Name -}} {{- if not (in $pagesByTag $tagName) -}} {{- $pagesByTag = merge $pagesByTag (dict $tagName (slice $page)) -}} {{- else -}} {{- $pagesForTag := index $pagesByTag $tagName -}} {{- $pagesForTag = $pagesForTag | append $page -}} {{- $pagesByTag = merge $pagesByTag (dict $tagName $pagesForTag) -}} {{- end -}} {{- end -}} {{- end -}} ``` {{< /figures/code >}} `$pagesByTag` is my empty dictionary. It will hold tag names as keys, each pointing to a slice (array) of page objects. For each page, I get its list of tags. For each tag, I check `$pagesByTag` to see if it already has a key/value pair for that tag. If not, I create a new entry in `$pagesByTag` with `merge`. If it does already, I get the slice for that tag with `index`, add the Page to the slice with `append`, and then merge the updated slice back into `$pagesByTag` with `merge`. It's not too bad once it's all spelled out, but it does feel like more work than it should take for such simple operations. I think this API could be improved substantially with some new functions that operate specifically on dictionaries and that have clear names that describe what they do. [dict]: https://gohugo.io/functions/dict/ [index]: https://gohugo.io/functions/index-function/ [merge]: https://gohugo.io/functions/merge/ [nsdictionary-init]: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/foundation/nsdictionary/1574181-dictionarywithobjectsandkeys?language=objc