CKAN: context not being passed to new template - python

In my CKAN extension, I'm adding a new tab to the user dashboard. I followed the procedure described in this answer and it seemed to work. In the controller for the new page, I set the template variables in the same way as they are set for the other pages on the dashboard. When I click on the tab and load the new page, though, I get UndefinedError: 'user_dict' is undefined. What's going wrong?
Here's the relevant part of my_extension/templates/user/dashboard.html where I add the tab:
{% ckan_extends %}
{% block page_header %}
<header class="module-content page-header hug">
<div class="content_action">
{% link_for _('Edit settings'), named_route='user.edit', id=user.name, class_='btn btn-default', icon='cog' %}
</div>
<ul class="nav nav-tabs">
{{ h.build_nav_icon('dashboard.index', _('News feed')) }}
{{ h.build_nav_icon('dashboard.datasets', _('My Datasets')) }}
{{ h.build_nav_icon('dashboard.organizations', _('My Organizations')) }}
{{ h.build_nav_icon('dashboard.groups', _('My Groups')) }}
{{ h.build_nav_icon('my_extension_dashboard_owned_datasets', _('My Owned Datasets')) }}
</ul>
</header>
{% endblock %}
Here's the new template so far, my_extension/templates/user/dashboard_owned_datasets.html:
{% extends "user/dashboard_datasets.html" %}
The relevant part of the plugin class definition:
class MyThemePlugin(plugins.SingletonPlugin, DefaultTranslation):
plugins.implements(plugins.IRoutes, inherit=True)
# IRoutes
def before_map(self, map):
with SubMapper(
map, controller="ckanext.my_extension.controller:MyUserController"
) as m:
m.connect(
"my_extension_dashboard_owned_datasets",
"/dashboard/owned_datasets",
action="dashboard_owned_datasets",
)
return map
And here's the new controller, in my_extension/controller.py:
# encoding: utf-8
import logging
import ckan.lib.base as base
from ckan.common import c
from ckan.controllers.user import UserController
log = logging.getLogger(__name__)
render = base.render
class MyUserController(UserController):
def dashboard_owned_datasets(self):
context = {"for_view": True, "user": c.user, "auth_user_obj": c.userobj}
data_dict = {"user_obj": c.userobj, "include_datasets": True}
self._setup_template_variables(context, data_dict)
log.critical(c.user_dict)
return render(
"user/dashboard_owned_datasets.html"
)
As you can see, I use the UserController's _setup_template_variables method, which is used in all the other dashboard actions in that controller. That method sets c.user_dict, among other things:
def _setup_template_variables(self, context, data_dict):
c.is_sysadmin = authz.is_sysadmin(c.user)
try:
user_dict = get_action('user_show')(context, data_dict)
except NotFound:
h.flash_error(_('Not authorized to see this page'))
h.redirect_to(controller='user', action='login')
except NotAuthorized:
abort(403, _('Not authorized to see this page'))
c.user_dict = user_dict
c.is_myself = user_dict['name'] == c.user
c.about_formatted = h.render_markdown(user_dict['about'])
I'm logging c.user_dict after setting it in the controller, and I see all the data I would expect to see there.
But when I click the tab and load http://localhost:5000/dashboard/owned_datasets, I get the error UndefinedError: 'user_dict' is undefined. What am I missing?

The answer is that the IRoutes plugin interface no longer works for what I want to use it for, due to the migration of CKAN from Pylons to Flask. The IBlueprint interface should be used instead. See https://github.com/ckan/ckan/wiki/Migration-from-Pylons-to-Flask#flask-views-blueprints-and-routing for more information on blueprints and how to convert an extension from using IRoutes to IBlueprint.

Related

How to get the current URL linkable within a Django template? [duplicate]

Some solutions provided on doing a Google search for "Django breadcrumbs" include using templates and block.super, basically just extending the base blocks and adding the current page to it. http://www.martin-geber.com/thought/2007/10/25/breadcrumbs-django-templates/
http://www.djangosnippets.org/snippets/1289/ - provides a template tag but I'm not sure this would work if you don't have your urls.py properly declared.
I'm wondering what's the best way? And if you have implemented breadcrumbs before how did you do it?
--- Edit --
My question was meant to be: is there a general accepted method of doing breadcrumbs in Django, but from the answers I see there is not, and there are many different solutions, I'm not sure who to award the correct answer to, as I used a variation of using the block.super method, while all the below answers would work.
I guess then this is too much of a subjective question.
Note: I provide the full snippet below, since djangosnippets has been finicky lately.
Cool, someone actually found my snippet :-) The use of my template tag is rather simple.
To answer your question there is no "built-in" django mechanism for dealing with breadcrumbs, but it does provide us with the next best thing: custom template tags.
Imagine you want to have breadcrumbs like so:
Services -> Programming
Services -> Consulting
Then you will probably have a few named urls: "services", and "programming", "consulting":
(r'^services/$',
'core.views.services',
{},
'services'),
(r'^services/programming$',
'core.views.programming',
{},
'programming'),
(r'^services/consulting$',
'core.views.consulting',
{},
'consulting'),
Now inside your html template (lets just look at consulting page) all you have to put is:
//consulting.html
{% load breadcrumbs %}
{% block breadcrumbs %}
{% breadcrumb_url 'Services' services %}
{% breadcrumb_url 'Consulting' consulting %}
{% endblock %}
If you want to use some kind of custom text within the breadcrumb, and don't want to link it, you can use breadcrumb tag instead.
//consulting.html
{% load breadcrumbs %}
{% block breadcrumbs %}
{% breadcrumb_url 'Services' services %}
{% breadcrumb_url 'Consulting' consulting %}
{% breadcrumb 'We are great!' %}
{% endblock %}
There are more involved situations where you might want to include an id of a particular object, which is also easy to do. This is an example that is more realistic:
{% load breadcrumbs %}
{% block breadcrumbs %}
{% breadcrumb_url 'Employees' employee_list %}
{% if employee.id %}
{% breadcrumb_url employee.company.name company_detail employee.company.id %}
{% breadcrumb_url employee.full_name employee_detail employee.id %}
{% breadcrumb 'Edit Employee ' %}
{% else %}
{% breadcrumb 'New Employee' %}
{% endif %}
{% endblock %}
DaGood breadcrumbs snippet
Provides two template tags to use in your HTML templates: breadcrumb and breadcrumb_url. The first allows creating of simple url, with the text portion and url portion. Or only unlinked text (as the last item in breadcrumb trail for example). The second, can actually take the named url with arguments! Additionally it takes a title as the first argument.
This is a templatetag file that should go into your /templatetags directory.
Just change the path of the image in the method create_crumb and you are good to go!
Don't forget to {% load breadcrumbs %} at the top of your html template!
from django import template
from django.template import loader, Node, Variable
from django.utils.encoding import smart_str, smart_unicode
from django.template.defaulttags import url
from django.template import VariableDoesNotExist
register = template.Library()
#register.tag
def breadcrumb(parser, token):
"""
Renders the breadcrumb.
Examples:
{% breadcrumb "Title of breadcrumb" url_var %}
{% breadcrumb context_var url_var %}
{% breadcrumb "Just the title" %}
{% breadcrumb just_context_var %}
Parameters:
-First parameter is the title of the crumb,
-Second (optional) parameter is the url variable to link to, produced by url tag, i.e.:
{% url person_detail object.id as person_url %}
then:
{% breadcrumb person.name person_url %}
#author Andriy Drozdyuk
"""
return BreadcrumbNode(token.split_contents()[1:])
#register.tag
def breadcrumb_url(parser, token):
"""
Same as breadcrumb
but instead of url context variable takes in all the
arguments URL tag takes.
{% breadcrumb "Title of breadcrumb" person_detail person.id %}
{% breadcrumb person.name person_detail person.id %}
"""
bits = token.split_contents()
if len(bits)==2:
return breadcrumb(parser, token)
# Extract our extra title parameter
title = bits.pop(1)
token.contents = ' '.join(bits)
url_node = url(parser, token)
return UrlBreadcrumbNode(title, url_node)
class BreadcrumbNode(Node):
def __init__(self, vars):
"""
First var is title, second var is url context variable
"""
self.vars = map(Variable,vars)
def render(self, context):
title = self.vars[0].var
if title.find("'")==-1 and title.find('"')==-1:
try:
val = self.vars[0]
title = val.resolve(context)
except:
title = ''
else:
title=title.strip("'").strip('"')
title=smart_unicode(title)
url = None
if len(self.vars)>1:
val = self.vars[1]
try:
url = val.resolve(context)
except VariableDoesNotExist:
print 'URL does not exist', val
url = None
return create_crumb(title, url)
class UrlBreadcrumbNode(Node):
def __init__(self, title, url_node):
self.title = Variable(title)
self.url_node = url_node
def render(self, context):
title = self.title.var
if title.find("'")==-1 and title.find('"')==-1:
try:
val = self.title
title = val.resolve(context)
except:
title = ''
else:
title=title.strip("'").strip('"')
title=smart_unicode(title)
url = self.url_node.render(context)
return create_crumb(title, url)
def create_crumb(title, url=None):
"""
Helper function
"""
crumb = """<span class="breadcrumbs-arrow">""" \
"""<img src="/media/images/arrow.gif" alt="Arrow">""" \
"""</span>"""
if url:
crumb = "%s<a href='%s'>%s</a>" % (crumb, url, title)
else:
crumb = "%s %s" % (crumb, title)
return crumb
The Django admin view modules have automatic breadcumbs, which are implemented like this:
{% block breadcrumbs %}
<div class="breadcrumbs">
{% trans 'Home' %}
{% block crumbs %}
{% if title %} › {{ title }}{% endif %}
{% endblock %}
</div>
{% endblock %}
So there is some kind of built-in support for this..
My view functions emit the breadcrumbs as a simple list.
Some information is kept in the user's session. Indirectly, however, it comes from the URL's.
Breadcrumbs are not a simple linear list of where they've been -- that's what browser history is for. A simple list of where they've been doesn't make a good breadcrumb trail because it doesn't reflect any meaning.
For most of our view functions, the navigation is pretty fixed, and based on template/view/URL design. In our cases, there's a lot of drilling into details, and the breadcrumbs reflect that narrowing -- we have a "realm", a "list", a "parent" and a "child". They form a simple hierarchy from general to specific.
In most cases, a well-defined URL can be trivially broken into a nice trail of breadcrumbs. Indeed, that's one test for good URL design -- the URL can be interpreted as breadcrumbs and displayed meaningfully to the users.
For a few view functions, where we present information that's part of a "many-to-many" join, for example, there are two candidate parents. The URL may say one thing, but the session's context stack says another.
For that reason, our view functions have to leave context clues in the session so we can emit breadcrumbs.
Try django-breadcrumbs — a pluggable middleware that add a breadcrumbs callable/iterable in your request object.
It supports simple views, generic views and Django FlatPages app.
I had the same issue and finally I've made simple django tempalate tag for it: https://github.com/prymitive/bootstrap-breadcrumbs
http://www.djangosnippets.org/snippets/1289/ - provides a template tag but i'm not sure this would work if you don't have your urls.py properly declared.
Nothing will work if you don't have your urls.py properly declared. Having said that, it doesn't look as though it imports from urls.py. In fact, it looks like to properly use that tag, you still have to pass the template some variables. Okay, that's not quite true: indirectly through the default url tag, which the breadcrumb tag calls. But as far as I can figure, it doesn't even actually call that tag; all occurrences of url are locally created variables.
But I'm no expert at parsing template tag definitions. So say somewhere else in the code it magically replicates the functionality of the url tag. The usage seems to be that you pass in arguments to a reverse lookup. Again, no matter what your project is, you urls.py should be configured so that any view can be reached with a reverse lookup. This is especially true with breadcrumbs. Think about it:
home > accounts > my account
Should accounts, ever hold an arbitrary, hardcoded url? Could "my account" ever hold an arbitrary, hardcoded url? Some way, somehow you're going to write breadcrumbs in such a way that your urls.py gets reversed. That's really only going to happen in one of two places: in your view, with a call to reverse, or in the template, with a call to a template tag that mimics the functionality of reverse. There may be reasons to prefer the former over the latter (into which the linked snippet locks you), but avoiding a logical configuration of your urls.py file is not one of them.
Try django-mptt.
Utilities for implementing Modified Preorder Tree Traversal (MPTT) with your Django Model classes and working with trees of Model instances.
This answer is just the same as #Andriy Drozdyuk (link). I just want to edit something so it works in Django 3.2 (in my case) and good in bootstrap too.
for create_crumb function (Remove the ">" bug in the current code)
def create_crumb(title, url=None):
"""
Helper function
"""
if url:
crumb = '<li class="breadcrumb-item">{}</li>'.format(url, title)
else:
crumb = '<li class="breadcrumb-item active" aria-current="page">{}</li>'.format(title)
return crumb
And for __init__ in BreadcrumbNode, add list() to make it subscriptable. And change smart_unicode to smart_text in render method
from django.utils.encoding import smart_text
class BreadcrumbNode(Node):
def __init__(self, vars):
"""
First var is title, second var is url context variable
"""
self.vars = list(map(Variable, vars))
def render(self, context):
title = self.vars[0].var
if title.find("'")==-1 and title.find('"')==-1:
try:
val = self.vars[0]
title = val.resolve(context)
except:
title = ''
else:
title=title.strip("'").strip('"')
title=smart_text(title)
And add this in base.html for the view for Bootstrap. Check the docs
<nav style="--bs-breadcrumb-divider: '>';" aria-label="breadcrumb">
<ol class="breadcrumb">
{% block breadcrumbs %}
{% endblock breadcrumbs %}
</ol>
</nav>
Obviously, no one best answer, but for practical reason I find that it is worth considering the naïve way. Just overwrite and rewrite the whole breadcrumb... (at least until the official django.contrib.breadcrumb released )
Without being too fancy, it is better to keep things simple. It helps the newcomer to understand. It is extremely customizable (e.g. permission checking, breadcrumb icon, separator characters, active breadcrumb, etc...)
Base Template
<!-- File: base.html -->
<html>
<body>
{% block breadcrumb %}
<ul class="breadcrumb">
<li>Dashboard</li>
</ul>
{% endblock breadcrumb %}
{% block content %}{% endblock content %}
</body>
</html>
Implementation Template
Later on each pages we rewrite and overwrite the whole breadcrumb block.
<!-- File: page.html -->
{% extends 'base.html' %}
{% block breadcrumb %}
<ul class="breadcrumb">
<li>Dashboard</li>
<li>Level 1</li>
<li class="active">Level 2</li>
</ul>
{% endblock breadcrumb %}
Practicallity
Realworld use cases:
Django Oscar: base template, simple bread
Django Admin: base template, simple bread, permission check breadcrumb
You could also reduce the boiler plate required to manage breadcrumbs using django-view-breadcrumbs, by adding a crumbs property to the view.
urls.py
urlpatterns = [
...
path('posts/<slug:slug>', views.PostDetail.as_view(), name='post_detail'),
...
]
views.py
from django.views.generic import DetailView
from view_breadcrumbs import DetailBreadcrumbMixin
class PostDetail(DetailBreadcrumbMixin, DetailView):
model = Post
template_name = 'app/post/detail.html'
base.html
{% load django_bootstrap_breadcrumbs %}
{% block breadcrumbs %}
{% render_breadcrumbs %}
{% endblock %}
Something like this may work for your situation:
Capture the entire URL in your view and make links from it. This will require modifying your urls.py, each view that needs to have breadcrumbs, and your templates.
First you would capture the entire URL in your urls.py file
original urls.py
...
(r'^myapp/$', 'myView'),
(r'^myapp/(?P<pk>.+)/$', 'myOtherView'),
...
new urls.py
...
(r'^(?P<whole_url>myapp/)$', 'myView'),
(r'^(?P<whole_url>myapp/(?P<pk>.+)/)$', 'myOtherView'),
...
Then in your view something like:
views.py
...
def myView(request, whole_url):
# dissect the url
slugs = whole_url.split('/')
# for each 'directory' in the url create a piece of bread
breadcrumbs = []
url = '/'
for slug in slugs:
if slug != '':
url = '%s%s/' % (url, slug)
breadcrumb = { 'slug':slug, 'url':url }
breadcrumbs.append(breadcrumb)
objects = {
'breadcrumbs': breadcrumbs,
}
return render_to_response('myTemplate.html', objects)
...
Which should be pulled out into a function that gets imported into the views that need it
Then in your template print out the breadcrumbs
myTemplate.html
...
<div class="breadcrumb-nav">
<ul>
{% for breadcrumb in breadcrumbs %}
<li>{{ breadcrumb.slug }}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
</div>
...
One shortcoming of doing it this way is that as it stands you can only show the 'directory' part of the url as the link text. One fix for this off the top of my head (probably not a good one) would be to keep a dictionary in the file that defines the breadcrumb function.
Anyways that's one way you could accomplish breadcrumbs, cheers :)
You might want to try django-headcrumbs (don’t worry, they are not going to eat your brains).
It’s very lightweight and absolutely straightforward to use, all you have to do is annotate your views (because defining crumbs structure in templates sounds crazy to me) with a decorator that explains how to get back from the given view.
Here is an example from the documentation:
from headcrumbs.decorators import crumb
from headcrumbs.util import name_from_pk
#crumb('Staff') # This is the root crumb -- it doesn’t have a parent
def index(request):
# In our example you’ll fetch the list of divisions (from a database)
# and output it.
#crumb(name_from_pk(Division), parent=index)
def division(request, slug):
# Here you find all employees from the given division
# and list them.
There are also some utility functions (e.g. name_from_pk you can see in the example) that automagically generate nice names for your crumbs without you having to wright lots of code.
I've created template filter for this.
Apply your custom filter (I've named it 'makebreadcrumbs') to the request.path like this:
{% with request.resolver_match.namespace as name_space %}
{{ request.path|makebreadcrumbs:name_space|safe }}
{% endwith %}
We need to pass url namespace as an arg to our filter.
Also use safe filter, because our filter will be returning string that needs to be resolved as html content.
Custom filter should look like this:
#register.filter
def makebreadcrumbs(value, arg):
my_crumbs = []
crumbs = value.split('/')[1:-1] # slice domain and last empty value
for index, c in enumerate(crumbs):
if c == arg and len(crumbs) != 1:
# check it is a index of the app. example: /users/user/change_password - /users/ is the index.
link = '{}'.format(reverse(c+':index'), c)
else:
if index == len(crumbs)-1:
link = '<span>{}</span>'.format(c)
# the current bread crumb should not be a link.
else:
link = '{}'.format(reverse(arg+':' + c), c)
my_crumbs.append(link)
return ' > '.join(my_crumbs)
# return whole list of crumbs joined by the right arrow special character.
Important:
splited parts of the 'value' in our filter should be equal to the namespace in the urls.py, so the reverse method can be called.
Hope it helped.
A generic way, to collect all callable paths of the current url could be resolved by the following code snippet:
from django.urls import resolve, Resolver404
path_items = request.path.split("/")
path_items.pop(0)
path_tmp = ""
breadcrumb_config = OrderedDict()
for path_item in path_items:
path_tmp += "/" + path_item
try:
resolve(path_tmp)
breadcrumb_config[path_item] = {'is_representative': True, 'current_path': path_tmp}
except Resolver404:
breadcrumb_config[path_item] = {'is_representative': False, 'current_path': path_tmp}
If the resolve function can't get a real path from any urlpattern, the Resolver404 exception will be thrown. For those items we set the is_representative flag to false. The OrderedDict breadcrumb_config holds after that the breadcrumb items with there configuration.
For bootstrap 4 breadcrumb for example, you can do something like the following in your template:
<nav aria-label="breadcrumb">
<ol class="breadcrumb">
{% for crumb, values in BREADCRUMB_CONFIG.items %}
<li class="breadcrumb-item {% if forloop.last or not values.is_representative %}active{% endif %}" {% if forloop.last %}aria-current="page"{% endif %}>
{% if values.is_representative %}
<a href="{{values.current_path}}">
{{crumb}}
</a>
{% else %}
{{crumb}}
{% endif %}
</li>
{% endfor %}
</ol>
</nav>
Only the links which won't raises a 404 are clickable.
I believe there is nothing simpler than that (django 3.2):
def list(request):
return render(request, 'list.html', {
'crumbs' : [
("Today", "https://www.python.org/"),
("Is", "https://www.python.org/"),
("Sunday", "https://www.djangoproject.com/"),
]
})
Breadcrumbs.html
<div class="page-title-right">
<ol class="breadcrumb m-0">
{% if crumbs %}
{% for c in crumbs %}
<li class="breadcrumb-item {{c.2}}">{{c.0}}</li>
{% endfor %}
{% endif %}
</ol>
</div>
css:
.m-0 {
margin: 0!important;
}
.breadcrumb {
display: flex;
flex-wrap: wrap;
padding: 0 0;
margin-bottom: 1rem;
list-style: none;
border-radius: .25rem;
}
dl, ol, ul {
margin-top: 0;
margin-bottom: 1rem;
}
ol, ul {
padding-left: 2rem;
}

how do i access the values in a session dynamically using django?

(Django , Python) I have created a list of book objects and it is being passed as context in my views.py along with the current session. On my template, i was to check if the books in that list are stored in the session, and if they are i want to access some info relating to that book within that session. how do i access the books in the session dynamically? is there a way?
i know i can access them by using "request.session.name" (where "name" is the same of the space in the session it is stored)
There are several book titles saved in the session, the way they are saved are as follows (in a function under views.py)
request.session["random book title"] = "random dollar price"
i want to access that "random dollar price" dynamically in a template.
this is the block of code in the template
{% for book in book_list %}
{% if book.title in request.session %}
{{ request.session.??? }}
{% endif %}
{% endfor %}
Thank you in advance!
You can make a custom template tag to look up by attribute like here
Performing a getattr() style lookup in a django template:
# app/templatetags/getattribute.py
import re
from django import template
from django.conf import settings
numeric_test = re.compile("^\d+$")
register = template.Library()
def getattribute(value, arg):
"""Gets an attribute of an object dynamically from a string name"""
if hasattr(value, str(arg)):
return getattr(value, arg)
elif hasattr(value, 'has_key') and value.has_key(arg):
return value[arg]
elif numeric_test.match(str(arg)) and len(value) > int(arg):
return value[int(arg)]
else:
return settings.TEMPLATE_STRING_IF_INVALID
register.filter('getattribute', getattribute)
Now change your template to
{% load getattribute %}
{% for book in book_list %}
{% if book.title in request.session %}
{{ request.session|getattribute:book.title }}
{% endif %}
{% endfor %}
This is a basic custom template tag example:
Django - Simple custom template tag example
and docs:
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.11/howto/custom-template-tags/
From what I remember from my django days should work
You can put session data in a dictionary and send this data to target template when you want to render it in view function.
def some_function(request):
context={
'data':sessionData #put session data here
}
return render(request,"pass/to/template.html",context)
Now you can access 'data' in your template.html
I think you should just send a list of book names from your view instead of a queryset so when you are crosschecking with session you use the title directly instead.
{% for book in book_list %}
{% if book in request.session %}
{{ request.session.book }}
{% endif %}
{% endfor %}

Fetching data from server in multiple pages of Flask application

I'm using Python with Flask and Jinja2 and I'm trying to implement a sidebar. In the HTML pages I have got this:
{% include "sidebar.html" %}
What I want in the sidebar file is to have a block of the latest users. To do that I need to get the results from the server for the sidebar.html file. But where should I write the code for that in the python file?
The way you could implement this functionality is by creating a Jinja variable on the python side:
app = Flask(__name__)
app.jinja_env.globals.update({
'latest_users': get_latest_users()
})
def get_latest_users() {
return ['Mark', 'Jane', 'Sally']
}
The variable latest_users can now be accessed from any Jinja template simply by doing:
{% for user in latest_users %}
<p>{{ user }}</p>
{% endfor %}
You can pass variables to the templates. When you use include your variables still can be used in this included part too:
#app.route('/')
def index():
users = ['user1', 'user2']
debug = False
render_template('index.html', users=users, debug=debug)
# index.html
{% include "sidebar.html" %}
#sidebar.html
{% for user in users %}
<p>{{ user }}</p>
{% endfor %}
{{debug}}

"TemplateSyntaxError: Invalid filter:"; custom django template filter based on django docs broken, but template tags working

I have a template filter based on the django docs at https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.8/howto/custom-template-tags/. For the life of me I can't see any difference in my usage and theirs, and am slowly going insane. I have a working tag I got on a forum as such:
myproject/index/templatetags/add_get_parameter.py:
from django.template import Library, Node, resolve_variable
register = Library()
class AddGetParameter(Node):
def __init__(self, values):
self.values = values
def render(self, context):
req = resolve_variable('request', context)
params = req.GET.copy()
for key, value in self.values.items():
params[key] = value.resolve(context)
return '?%s' % params.urlencode()
#register.tag
def add_get(parser, token):
pairs = token.split_contents()[1:]
values = {}
for pair in pairs:
s = pair.split('=', 1)
values[s[0]] = parser.compile_filter(s[1])
return AddGetParameter(values)
This one, add_get on lines 8-9, works, whereas shorten_title on line 4 doesn't work:
myproject/templates/index/silo.html:
{% load bootstrap add_get_parameter extras %}
...other stuff...
{% for article in articles %}
<div class="col-md-4 article-link">
<div class="panel panel-default hover">
<div class="panel-heading"><h4 class="url-link">{{ article.title|shorten_title }}</h4></div>
<div class="panel-body">
<p> <span class="url-text">{{ article.url }}</span></p>
<div class="article_button">Edit</div>
<div class="article_button"><p>Archive</p></div>
<div class="article_button">Delete</div>
<div style="margin-top:8px;">
{% for tag in article.tags.all %}
<p class="tag">{{ tag.name }}</p>
{% endfor %}
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
{% endfor %}
Here's the villian:
from django.template import Library
register = Library()
#register.filter
def shorten_title(title):
length = len(title)
new = title
if length > 65:
new = title[0:65] + "..."
return new
register.filter('shorten_title', shorten_title)
He's been so rude I double registered him, just to see what happens (he doesn't work registered once as a decorator or afterward, and doesn't work registered twice).
{{ article.title }} works, but {{ article.title|shorten_title }} breaks the page with:
django.template.base.TemplateSyntaxError
TemplateSyntaxError: Invalid filter: 'shorten_title'
'Index' is definitely registered and working, and the page works when I delete the filter from that article.title tag.
Usually when I get a stubborn error I missed something small, but following the docs word for word has me baffled (I've written several working filters before). Is this filter bad, or is there maybe something else in my page that causes the issue? Thanks
You need to make sure you import the file with register.filter('shorten_title', shorten_title) before you render the template. Since that call happens outside of any functions it is run when you import the module. This has the side effect of registering it so that it will be available in your templates afterwards.

How do I access my own template variables from within a custom template tags template?

I am using Django to build a website.
I have a context processor setup that looks something like this:
TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS = (
...
"mysite.context_processors.mystandardvariables"
)
This adds some standard variables that I like to use in templates, such as SITE_NAME and SITE_ROOT.
I have just created my first custom template tag and I find that I cannot access these standard variables.
I don't get any errors and my page displays ok, it's just that the variable that I want are not available.
To check which variables are available I already used {% debug %}.
My tag looks like this:
#register.inclusion_tag('search/search_snippet.html', takes_context = True)
def search(context):
form = forms.SearchForm()
return {'form': form }
The template for the tag looks like this:
<form action="{{ SITE_ROOT }}search" method="post">
{% csrf_token %}
<table>
{{ form.as_table }}
</table>
<input type="submit" value="Submit">
</form>
I am including the search tag in my home page like this:
{% extends "base.html" %}
{% load search_tags %}
{% block content %}
{% search %}
{% endblock %}
To answer my own question, I figured out a way to do what I want using a normal template tag rather than an inclusion tag.
#register.tag
def search(parser, token):
return SearchNode()
class SearchNode(template.Node):
def render(self, context):
return render_to_string('search/search_snippet.html',
{ 'form' : forms.FindForm() }, context)
Here I am passing the context through to the function that renders my template to a string.
I would have preferred to implement this as an inclusion tag as it seems like less work, but I wasn't sure how to get it to work.
If anyone knows how to get this working with an inclusion tag please answer and I'll mark your question as the right answer.

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