solidus-metadata

[RDFa][rdfa], [Schema.org][schema], [Open Graph][open], and good ol’ [meta tags][meta]. The semantic web is really an actual thing! But getting the right tags and code in place takes time. That’s time you _should_ be spending optimizing the content as bes


Keywords
ecosystem:solidus, solidus, seo, metadata
License
MIT
Install
npm install solidus-metadata@1.0.1

Documentation

solidus-metadata CircleCI Status

RDFa, Schema.org, Open Graph, and good ol’ meta tags. The semantic web is really an actual thing! But getting the right tags and code in place takes time. That’s time you should be spending optimizing the content as best as you can. The plethora of API data available in a typical Solidus site offers plenty to work with. But passing that content into the right tags remains tricky, until now.

var metadata = require('metadata.json');
var addMetadata = require('solidus-metadata');

addMetadata( context, metadata );

metadata

This module adds a metadata object to your context that’s most useful in a page’s layout. Content can be defined for any of the following special properties:

title

Generally prone to truncation, so it really shouldn’t be longer than 55 characters.

description

A blob of text, that should prioritize what really needs to be said in the first ~155 characters.

image

A thumbnail, for use in og:image, twitter:image, etc.

ns:*

Open Graph tags, Twitter Cards, or any other namespaced RDF properties.

canonical

A path or URL pointing to the canonical version of the current page.

Mapping

Simple routing patterns are used to match the routes of your pages and map the desired data to their context when rendered. Any variables should be specified in {curly} syntax, just like the filesystem:

{
  "/news": {
    "title": "resources.post.title",
    "description": "resources.post.excerpt"
  },
  "/news/{id}/{slug}": {
    "title": "resources.post.title",
    "description": "resources.post.excerpt",
    "image": "resources.post.featured_image.source",
    "og:type": "article",
    "canonical": "/news/{id}/{slug}"
  }
}

YAML is recommended for sites bigger than a couple of pages. It’s a tool that helps direct focus on the content, and avoid syntax errors through a more lenient syntax than JSON. js-yaml is a good parsing module.

/news/{id}/{slug}:

  title: resources.post.title
  description: resources.post.excerpt
  image: resources.post.featured_image.source
  og:type: article
  canonical: /news/{id}/{slug}

Fallbacks / Defaults

It’s a good idea to add at least one fallback route to provide some default metadata when no other routes are matched. Just add a * at the end of a path a page should fallback to:

/anything/*:

  title: The infinite is possible.
  description: You can do anything, anything at all.

Whenever possible provide a descriptive and concise for your pages to avoid filling indexes with repetitive, unhelpful content. Fallbacks should not be relied upon as they will do just that if not used sparingly.

Content

All content is defined as strings. Aside from simple text, certain patterns trigger some additional magic when matched:

  • Files are strings that look like relative paths and end with an image file extension: gif|jpg|jpeg|png

  • URLs are strings beginning with http that are valid URLs

  • Data is a string without any spaces that can select anything in your context with dot notation. No worries, deeply nested properties will be safely accessed. Items in an array can be selected by their index with dot or bracket syntax. Properties can also be accessed from within text using {{property}} syntax. There’s no limit to how many you can select. Any markup in the resulting string will be stripped.

  • Canonical Path Variables can be specified in the same {curly} syntax as page routes, and will be replaced with any like-named variables from the matched route. Relative paths will be automatically prefixed with the current host.


MIT LICENSE
copyright © 2015 sparkart group, inc.