# Content References Content referencing (conref) is a convenient mechanism to reuse content from other files or books. ### Importing local files Importing an other file's content is easy using the `include` tag: ``` {% include "./test.md" %} ``` ### Importing file from another book GitBook can also resolve the include path by using git: ``` {% include "git+https://github.com/GitbookIO/documentation.git/README.md#0.0.1" %} ``` The format of git url is: ``` git+https://user@hostname/owner/project.git/file#commit-ish ``` The real git url part should finish with `.git`, the filename to import is extracted after the `.git` till the fragment of the url. The `commit-ish` can be any tag, sha, or branch which can be supplied as an argument to `git checkout`. The default is `master`. ### Inheritance Template inheritance is a way to make it easy to reuse templates. When writing a template, you can define "blocks" that child templates can override. The inheritance chain can be as long as you like. `block` defines a section on the template and identifies it with a name. Base templates can specify blocks and child templates can override them with new content. ``` {% extends "./mypage.md" %} {% block pageContent %} # This is my page content {% endblock %} ``` In the file `mypage.md`, you should specify the blocks that can be extended: ``` {% block pageContent %} This is the default content {% endblock %} # License {% include "./LICENSE" %} ```