docs/v1/guides/cheatsheet.md
Here are some helpful conversions for functions you’re probably well familiar with in WordPress and their Timber equivalents. These assume a PHP file with the Timber::context(); function at the top. For example:
$context = Timber::context();
$context['post'] = new Timber\Post();
Timber::render( 'single.twig', $context );
blog_info('charset') => {{ site.charset }}blog_info('description') => {{ site.description }}blog_info('sitename') => {{ site.name }}blog_info('url') => {{ site.url }}implode(' ', get_body_class()) => <body class="{{ body_class }}">the_content() => {{ post.content }}the_permalink() => {{ post.link }}the_title() => {{ post.title }}get_the_tags() => {{ post.tags }}get_template_directory_uri() => {{ theme.link }} (Parent Themes)get_template_directory_uri() => {{ theme.parent.link }} (Child Themes)get_stylesheet_directory_uri() => {{ theme.link }}get_template_directory() => {{ theme.parent.path }}get_stylesheet_directory() => {{ theme.path }}In WordPress parlance, stylesheet_directory = child theme, template directory = parent theme. Both WP and Timber functions safely return the current theme info if there's no parent/child going on.