Running App Example
Example of running GatsbyJS blog with pagination https://master.d2c2u44of9gyth.amplifyapp.com/. This App front-end is based on GatsbyJS/React components. The pagination done by customizing gatsby-node.js
, blog-list.js
, and the blog-post.js
.
To me, this approach is easier to implement and at the same time, provides good coding practice.
There are two parts of the pagination:
Blog Post pagination (let's call it BPP)
Blog Post pagination displays next and previous post relatives to the post that currently being viewed. See below example:
Blog Listing pagination (let's call it BLP)
Blog Listing pagination displays how many pages in total. Provides page listing as well as next and previous page links. See below example:
Code
gatsby-node.js
As usual, Gatsby will generate static pages during build, we can control the pages by using createPages() method inside gatsby-node.js. Below snippet taken from https://github.com/sigitp-git/sigit.cloud-gatsby/blob/master/gatsby-node.js .
//...lines removed...
// Dynamically reate pages based on graphql query on slugs from each node, put component of that page from blog-post.js template
// Create pagination using src/templates/blog-list.js
exports.createPages = ({ graphql, actions }) => {
const { createPage } = actions
const blogPostTemplate = path.resolve('./src/templates/blog-post.js')
const blogListTemplate = path.resolve('./src/templates/blog-list.js')
// this graphql is function string to pass graphql query, this is a node version of graphql
// this query returns a promise of slugs. use then instead of async await
return graphql(`
query loadSlugQuery ($limit: Int!){
allMarkdownRemark(
sort: { fields: [frontmatter___date], order: DESC }
limit: $limit
) {
edges {
node {
fields {
slug
}
frontmatter {
title
}
}
}
}
}
`, { limit: 1000}).then(result => {
const posts = result.data.allMarkdownRemark.edges
posts.forEach((post, index) => {
// create prev and next on each posts render (for Blog Post Pagination, BPP)
const previous = index === posts.length - 1 ? null : posts[index + 1].node
const next = index === 0 ? null : posts[index - 1].node
// previous and next are objects props sent as pageContect object to blogPostTemplate
createPage({
path: post.node.fields.slug,
component: blogPostTemplate,
context: {
slug: post.node.fields.slug,
previous,
next,
},
})
})
// Create blog list pages (for Blog List Pagination, BLP)
// Assign path /2, /3, p/4, etc
const postsPerPage = 6
const numPages = Math.ceil(posts.length / postsPerPage)
Array.from({ length: numPages }).forEach((_, i) => {
createPage({
path: i === 0 ? `/` : `${i + 1}`,
component: blogListTemplate,
context: {
limit: postsPerPage,
skip: i * postsPerPage,
numPages,
currentPage: i + 1
},
});
});
})
}
Note that previous
and next
are node objects (blog post objects) passed as pageContext
to blog-post.js
during render. We will utilize these two objects on our blog-post.js
to create links to previous and next post.
Also note that numPages
, limit
, skip
, and currentPage
are objects (blog list objects) passed as pageContext
to blog-list.js
during render. We will utilize these objects on our blog-list.js
to create links to blog listing pages.
blog-post.js
We will use the Blog Post Pagination inside blog post page, below snippet taken from https://github.com/sigitp-git/sigit.cloud-gatsby/blob/master/src/templates/blog-post.js .
On this file, pageContext
contains previous
and next
object passed by gatsby-node.js
. We will use these objects to create links to previous and next post.
const BlogPost = ({ data, pageContext }) => {
//console.log(pageContext)
const { previous, next } = pageContext
//...lines removed...
return (
//...lines removed...
<ul
style={{
display: `flex`,
flexWrap: `wrap`,
justifyContent: `space-between`,
listStyle: `none`,
padding: 0,
}}
>
<li>
{previous && (
<Link to={previous.fields.slug} rel="prev">
{"<<"+previous.frontmatter.title}
</Link>
)}
</li>
<li>
{next && (
<Link to={next.fields.slug} rel="next">
{next.frontmatter.title+">>"}
</Link>
)}
</li>
</ul>
blog-list.js
We will use the Blog List Pagination inside blog listing page, below snippet taken from https://github.com/sigitp-git/sigit.cloud-gatsby/blob/master/src/templates/blog-list.js .
On this file, pageContext
contains numPages
, limit
, skip
, and currentPage
passed by gatsby-node.js
. We will use these objects to create links to blog listing pages.
const BlogList = ({ data, pageContext}) => {
//console.log(pageContext)
const { numPages, limit, skip, currentPage } = pageContext
//...lines removed...
return (
//...lines removed...
<div>
<ul
style={{
display: 'flex',
flexWrap: 'wrap',
justifyContent: 'center',
alignItems: 'center',
listStyle: 'none',
padding: 0,
}}
>
{!isFirst && (
<Link to={prevPage} rel="prev" style={{marginTop: '0.1rem', marginBottom: '0.1rem', padding: '0.5rem', color: 'var(--themeColor)'}}>
{"<< Prev"}
</Link>
)}
{Array.from({ length: numPages }, (_, i) => (
<li
key={`pagination-number${i + 1}`}
style={{
margin: 0,
}}
>
<Link
to={`/${i === 0 ? '' : i + 1}`}
style={{
marginTop: '0.1rem',
marginBottom: '0.1rem',
padding: '0.5rem',
textDecoration: 'none',
color: i + 1 === currentPage ? '#ffffff' : 'var(--themeColor)',
background: i + 1 === currentPage ? 'var(--themeColor)' : '',
}}
>
{i + 1}
</Link>
</li>
))}
{!isLast && (
<Link to={nextPage} rel="next" style={{ marginTop: '0.1rem', marginBottom: '0.1rem', padding: '0.5rem', color: 'var(--themeColor)' }}>
{"Next >>"}
</Link>
)}
</ul>
</div>
Summary
GatsbyJS pagination can be done with plugins, but also can be done with simple code on gatsby-node.js
, blog-list.js
, and the blog-post.js
.
References:
https://www.gatsbyjs.org/docs/adding-pagination/
https://nickymeuleman.netlify.app/blog/gatsby-pagination
https://github.com/NickyMeuleman/gatsby-paginated-blog
Top comments (1)
Great article! Helped me get on track with pagination. Much appreciated