hugo/examples/blog/content/post/hello-hugo.md

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---
title: "Hello Hugo!"
description: "Saying 'Hello' from Hugo"
date: "2014-09-01"
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categories:
- "example"
- "hello"
tags:
- "example"
- "hugo"
- "blog"
---
Hello from Hugo! If you're reading this in your browser, good job! The file `content/post/hello-hugo.md` has been
converted into a complete HTML document by Hugo. Isn't that pretty nifty?
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A Section
---------
Here's a simple titled section where you can place whatever information you want.
You can use inline HTML if you want, but really there's not much that Markdown can't do.
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Showing off with Markdown
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-------------------------
A full cheat sheet can be found [here](https://github.com/adam-p/markdown-here/wiki/Markdown-Cheatsheet)
or through [Google](https://google.com/).
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There are some *easy* examples for styling, though. I can't **emphasize** that enough.
Creating [links](https://google.com/) or `inline code` blocks are very straightforward.
```
There are some *easy* examples for styling, though. I can't **emphasize** that enough.
Creating [links](https://google.com/) or `inline code` blocks are very straightforward.
```
Front Matter for Fun
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--------------------
This is the meta data for this post. It is located at the top of the `content/post/hello-hugo.md` markdown file.
```
---
title: "Hello Hugo!"
description: "Saying 'Hello' from Hugo"
date: "2014-09-01"
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categories:
- "example"
- "hello"
tags:
- "example"
- "hugo"
- "blog"
---
```
This section, called 'Front Matter', is what tells Hugo about the content in this file: the `title` of the item, the
`description`, and the `date` it was posted. In our example, we've added two custom bits of data too. The `categories` and
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`tags` sections are used in this example for indexing/grouping content. You will learn more about what that means by
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examining the code in this example and through reading the Hugo [documentation](http://gohugo.io/overview/introduction).