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Kirby 3.6.6

Pagination

The time will come when we have more than just a few articles or projects in our blog/projects list and we can't show them all on one page.

This is a simple example for a list of articles for a blog:

<?php foreach ($page->children()->listed()->flip() as $article): ?>

<article>
  <h1><?= $article->title() ?></h1>
  <p><?= $article->text()->excerpt(300) ?></p>
  <a href="<?= $article->url() ?>">Read more…</a>
</article>

<?php endforeach ?>

We need to modify that slightly to get the last 10 articles and then add pagination to it:

<?php foreach($articles = $page->children()->listed()->flip()->paginate(10) as $article): ?>

...

<?php endforeach ?>

We paginate the list of articles with ->paginate(10). This automatically will limit the number of recent articles to ten and it will also attach a handy pagination object to the set of pages.

By creating a new variable $articles, we can access the pagination later in the template.

If you already got more than 10 articles you should now just see the last 10 on your blog page. In the next step we will add a older posts | newer posts navigation to the bottom of our page, by using the new pagination object and its methods, which have been attached to the $articles variable.

Add this below your foreach loop:

<?php if ($articles->pagination()->hasPages()): ?>
<nav class="pagination">

  <?php if ($articles->pagination()->hasNextPage()): ?>
  <a class="next" href="<?= $articles->pagination()->nextPageURL() ?>">
    ‹ older posts
  </a>
  <?php endif ?>

  <?php if ($articles->pagination()->hasPrevPage()): ?>
  <a class="prev" href="<?= $articles->pagination()->prevPageURL() ?>">
    newer posts ›
  </a>
  <?php endif ?>

</nav>
<?php endif ?>

With $articles->pagination()->hasPages() we can check if there are enough articles at all, so it makes sense to show the pagination.

With $articles->pagination()->hasNextPage() we can check if there's a next page and with $articles->pagination()->hasPrevPage() we can check if there's a previous page. By using those if clauses we can make sure
that we don't show navigation links if not necessary.

The pagination object also provides some simple methods, which will build URLs for the previous and next pages for you:

<a href="<?= $articles->pagination()->nextPageURL() ?>">

...

<a href="<?= $articles->pagination()->prevPageURL() ?>">

Both will automatically attach /page:2 for example to your url.

<ul>
  <?php foreach ($list = $page->children()->paginate(10) as $item): ?>
  <li><!-- item html --></li>
  <?php endforeach ?>
</ul>

<?php $pagination = $list->pagination() ?>
<nav>
  <ul>

    <?php if ($pagination->hasPrevPage()): ?>
    <li>
      <a href="<?= $pagination->prevPageURL() ?>">‹</a>
    </li>
    <?php else: ?>
    <li>
      <span>‹</span>
    </li>
    <?php endif ?>

    <?php foreach ($pagination->range(10) as $r): ?>
    <li>
      <a<?= $pagination->page() === $r ? ' aria-current="page"' : '' ?> href="<?= $pagination->pageURL($r) ?>">
        <?= $r ?>
      </a>
    </li>
    <?php endforeach ?>

    <?php if ($pagination->hasNextPage()): ?>
    <li>
      <a href="<?= $pagination->nextPageURL() ?>">›</a>
    </li>
    <?php else: ?>
    <li>
      <span>›</span>
    </li>
    <?php endif ?>

  </ul>
</nav>