Prevent Widows in Jekyll and Middleman

One of my major pet peeves while reading Internet publications is when article titles (normally wrapped in header tags) display line breaks that result in unfortunate widows. A widow is when a line break occurs and a single lonely word is bumped to the next line, left to poke me in eye.

Luckily, this can easily be avoided in both Jekyll and Middleman. The goal is to determine if the title is at least two words in length and then replace the last space in the title with an . This non-breaking space will keep the last two words married together so that in the event of a line break they will always bump down to the next line together.

The following code is a Jekyll filter that is used in Liquid templates. Simply place this filter in a file named filters.rb and save it to the _plugins folder (create this file and folder if you don’t have them):

# filters.rb module Jekyll module WidowFilter def no_widows ( title ) if title . strip . count ( " " ) >= 2 title . split [ 0 . . . - 1 ]. join ( " " ) + " #{ title . split [ - 1 ] } " else title . strip end end end end Liquid :: Template . register_filter ( Jekyll :: WidowFilter )

The filter is easily invoked in a Liquid template:

<h1> {{ post.title | no_widows }} </h1>

The process is very similar in Middleman except it’s referred to as a helper instead of a filter. Place the following code in the config.rb file:

# config.rb helpers do def no_widows ( title ) if title . strip . count ( " " ) >= 2 title . split [ 0 . . . - 1 ]. join ( " " ) + " #{ title . split [ - 1 ] } " else title . strip end end end

Middleman supports both Haml and ERB. To use the helper in Haml:

%h1 = no_widows ( article . title )

Or in ERB:

<h1> <%= no_widows ( article . title ) %> </h1>

If you view the source code for this site you’ll see that I use the same technique for my titles. It’s a nice touch and the type of attention to detail that makes a better experience for the reader.