1.1.1 • Published 5 years ago

gatsby-paginate v1.1.1

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4,998
License
SEE LICENSE IN li...
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github
Last release
5 years ago

Gatsby-paginate

This library provides a simple API for paginating an array of posts/pages for your blog/site homepage in Gatsby js.

LOOKING FOR MAINTAINERS - please email rob@pixelstew.co.uk with subject GATSBY_PAGINATE

Installation

yarn add gatsby-paginate

Usage

  • Require the package in your gatsby-node.js file.
  • Add a call to createPaginatedPages in gatsby-node.js.

Then add the following to the top of your gatsby-node.js file.

const createPaginatedPages = require('gatsby-paginate')

Use case 1 - paginate list of posts on home page

To create a paginated index of your blog posts, you need to do four things:

  • Remove the index.js file from the pages directory.
  • Create an index.js file in the templates directory and refer to it in the createPaginatedPages call

Call createPaginatedPages

You probably already have something like this in your gatsby-node.js file to generate the pages for your blog:

exports.createPages = ({ graphql, actions: { createPage } }) => {
  return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    graphql(`
      {
        posts: allMarkdownRemark(
          sort: { fields: [frontmatter___date], order: DESC }
        ) {
          edges {
            node {
              id
              frontmatter {
                title
              }
              fields {
                slug
              }
            }
          }
        }
      }
    `).then(result => {
      result.data.posts.edges.map(({ node }) => {
        createPage({
          path: node.fields.slug,
          component: path.resolve('./src/templates/post.js'),
          context: {
            slug: node.fields.slug,
          },
        })
      })
      resolve()
    })
  })
}

Just insert a call to createPaginatedPages before (or after) the createPage function:

exports.createPages = ({ graphql, actions: { createPage } }) => {
  return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    graphql(`
      //graphql query
    `).then(result => {
      createPaginatedPages({
        edges: result.data.posts.edges,
        createPage: createPage,
        pageTemplate: 'src/templates/index.js',
        pageLength: 5, // This is optional and defaults to 10 if not used
        pathPrefix: '', // This is optional and defaults to an empty string if not used
        context: {}, // This is optional and defaults to an empty object if not used
      })
      result.data.posts.edges.map(({ node }) => {
        createPage({
          path: node.fields.slug,
          component: path.resolve('./src/templates/post.js'),
          context: {
            slug: node.fields.slug,
          },
        })
      })
      resolve()
    })
  })
}

Notice that createPaginatedPages is being passed an options object.

  1. edges is the array of nodes that comes from the GraphQL query.
  2. createPage is simply the createPage function you get from actions.
  3. pageTemplate is a template to use for the index page. And
  4. pageLength is an optional parameter that defines how many posts to show per index page. It defaults to 10.
  5. pathPrefix is an optional parameter for passing the name of a path to add to the path generated in the createPagefunc. This is used in use case 2 below.
  6. context is an optional parameter which is used as the context property when createPage is called.

createPaginatedPages will then call createPage to create an index page for each of the groups of pages. The content that describes the blogs (title, slug, etc) that will go in each page will be passed to the template through props.pageContext so you need to make sure that everything that you want on the index page regarding the blogs should be requested in the GraphQL query in gatsby-node.js.

Use case 2 - paginate a post or use pagination on a page other than index

Call createPaginatedPages in the same way as above but...

This time pass in a pathPrefix

createPaginatedPages({
  edges: result.data.posts.edges,
  createPage: createPage,
  pageTemplate: 'src/templates/your_cool_template.js',
  pageLength: 5,
  pathPrefix: 'your_page_name',
  buildPath: (index, pathPrefix) =>
    index > 1 ? `${pathPrefix}/${index}` : `/${pathPrefix}`, // This is optional and this is the default
})

Then...

  • Create a template in tha same way as above but this time
  • Add a pathPrefix
  • (optional) add buildPath if you want to have more control over the pagination URL structure

In this instance a new set of pages will be created at the following path your_site/your_page_name Then a second paginated page of your_site/your_page_name/2

PLEASE NOTE: THE PATH PREFIX FUNCTIONALITY IS UNDER DEVELOPMENT AND MORE FLEXIBILITY WILL BE ADDED SOON

Create the template

This is a simple template which might be used in use case 1 above to replace the index of a blog with a paginated list of posts.

The pageContext object which contains the following 5 keys is passed to the template;

  1. group - (arr) an array containing the number of edges/nodes specified in the pageLength option.
  2. index - (int) this is the index of the edge/node.
  3. first - (bool) Soon to be deprecated - please calculate first using index and pageCount - is this the first page?
  4. last - (bool) Soon to be deprecated - please calculate last using index and pageCount - is this the last page?
  5. pageCount - (int) the total number of pages being paginated through
  6. additionalContext - (obj) optional additional context
import React, { Component } from 'react'
import Link from 'gatsby-link'

const NavLink = props => {
  if (!props.test) {
    return <Link to={props.url}>{props.text}</Link>
  } else {
    return <span>{props.text}</span>
  }
}

const IndexPage = ({ pageContext }) => {
  const { group, index, first, last, pageCount } = pageContext
  const previousUrl = index - 1 == 1 ? '/' : (index - 1).toString()
  const nextUrl = (index + 1).toString()

  return (
    <div>
      <h4>{pageCount} Pages</h4>

      {group.map(({ node }) => (
        <div key={node.id} className="blogListing">
          <div className="date">{node.frontmatter.date}</div>
          <Link className="blogUrl" to={node.fields.slug}>
            {node.frontmatter.title}
          </Link>
          <div>{node.excerpt}</div>
        </div>
      ))}
      <div className="previousLink">
        <NavLink test={first} url={previousUrl} text="Go to Previous Page" />
      </div>
      <div className="nextLink">
        <NavLink test={last} url={nextUrl} text="Go to Next Page" />
      </div>
    </div>
  )
}
export default IndexPage
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