On this episode, we look at templates, the primary tool that Django provides to build user interfaces in your Django app.

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Last Episode

On the previous episode, we talked about views and how views handle requests to create HTTP responses for users.

Set Up

Templates are static files that Django will fill in with data. In order to use those files, we must instruct Django on where to find them.

# project/settings.py TEMPLATES = [ { 'BACKEND' : 'django.template.backends.django.DjangoTemplates' , 'DIRS' : [], 'APP_DIRS' : True, 'OPTIONS' : { 'context_processors' : [ 'django.template.context_processors.debug' , 'django.template.context_processors.request' , 'django.contrib.auth.context_processors.auth' , 'django.contrib.messages.context_processors.messages' , ], }, }, ]

From my perspective, keeping templates in a single directory makes it very clear where all the layout and UI in your system will live. To use that pattern, we must set the DIRS variable with the directory that we want Django to include. I recommend keeping a templates directory at the root of your project. If you do that, your DIRS value will change to something like:

# project/settings.py TEMPLATES = [ ... "DIRS" : [os . path . join(BASE_DIR, "templates" )], ... ]

Using Render

Django builds your user interface by rendering a template. The idea behind rendering is that dynamic data is combined with a static template file to produce a final output.

# application/views.py from django.shortcuts import render def a_template_view (request): context = { 'first_name' : 'Johnny' } return render(request, 'hello.html' , context)

< h1 >Hello {{ first_name }}</ h1 >

There are some interesting things to note about this example.

The template can be any plain text file type. In the process of rendering, Django took the context data dictionary and used its keys as variable names in the template.

This idea of mixing context and static layout is the core concept of working with templates.

Reconsider TemplateView from the last episode.

# application/views.py from django.views.generic.base import TemplateView class HelloView (TemplateView): template_name = 'hello.html' def get_context_data (self, * args, ** kwargs): context = super() . get_context_data( * args, ** kwargs) context[ 'first_name' ] = 'Johnny' return context

Template Core Elements

When using templates, we take context data and insert it into the placeholders within the template.

This most basic form of filling placeholders with context are template variables. The previous section showed an example by using the name variable. The context dictionary contained a name key and double curly braces like {{ name }} are where the name value is used.

context = { 'address' : { 'street' : '123 Main St.' , 'city' : 'Beverly Hills' , 'state' : 'CA' , 'zip_code' : '90210' , } }

The address is: {{ address.street }} {{ address.city }}, {{ address.state }} {{ address.zip_code}}

This would render as:

The address is: 123 Main St. Beverly Hills, CA 90210

The core template language also includes some standard programming logic keywords by using tags. Template tags look like {% some_tag %} whereas template variables look like {{ some_variable }} . Variables are meant to be placeholders to fill in, but tags offer more power.

The if tag is for handling conditional logic that your template might need.

{% if user.is_authenticated %} <h1>Welcome, {{ user.username }} </h1> {% endif %}

This example will only include this welcome message HTML header tag when the user is logged in to the application. We started the example with an if tag.

{% if user.is_authenticated %} <h1>Welcome, {{ user.username }} </h1> {% else %} <h1>Welcome, guest</h1> {% endif %}

In this case, only one of the header tags will render depending on whether the user is authenticated or not.

The other core tag to consider is the for loop tag.

<p>Prices:</p> <ul> {% for item in items %} <li> {{ item.name }} costs {{ item.price }} .</li> {% endfor %} </ul>

items = [ { 'name' : 'Pizza' , 'price' : '$12.99' }, { 'name' : 'Soda' , 'price' : '$3.99' }, ]

Then the output would look roughly like:

< p >Prices:</ p > < ul > < li >Pizza costs $12.99.</ li > < li >Soda costs $3.99.</ li > </ ul >

The forloop variable has some attributes like first and last that you can use to make templates behave differently on certain loop iterations.

Counting: {% for number in first_three_numbers %} {{ number }}{% if forloop.last %} is last! {% endif %} {% endfor %}

Context Processors

Here’s the set of context processors that Django’s startproject command brings in by default.

'context_processors' : [ 'django.template.context_processors.debug' , 'django.template.context_processors.request' , 'django.contrib.auth.context_processors.auth' , 'django.contrib.messages.context_processors.messages' , ],

We can look at the actual definition of the request context processor included in that default list.

# django/template/context_processors.py def request (request): return { 'request' : request}

That’s it! Because of this context processor, the request object will be available as a variable to any template in your project. That’s super powerful.

Reusable Templates

Now let’s talk about one of the powerhouse features of the template system: reusable pieces.

<!DOCTYPE html> < html > < head > < link rel = "stylesheet" type = "text/css" href = "styles.css" > </ head > < body > < h1 >Hello from the Home page</ h1 > </ body > </ html >

Here is a page to learn about the company behind the website.

<!DOCTYPE html> < html > < head > < link rel = "stylesheet" type = "text/css" href = "styles.css" > </ head > < body > < h1 >Learn about our company</ h1 > </ body > </ html >

Imagine there were 2,000 pages instead of 2 pages. Making big changes quickly across a site would be virtually impossible!

Django helps you avoid this scenario entirely with a few tags. Let’s make a new template called base.html .

<!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="styles.css"> </head> <body> {% block main %}{% endblock %} </body> </html>

{% extends "base.html" %} {% block main %} <h1>Hello from the Home page</h1> {% endblock %}

That’s the power of Django’s template extension system.

Another powerful tool for reuse is the include tag. What happens when a template file is super long?

You may want to use include to:

Keep templates tidy. You can break a large template up into small pieces that are more manageable. Use a template fragment in different parts of your site. Maybe you have a piece of template that should only appear on a few pages.

<!DOCTYPE html> <html> {% include "head.html" %} <body> {% include "navigation.html" %} {% block main %}{% endblock %} </body> {% include "footer.html" %} </html>

block , extends , and include are core tags for keeping your user interface code from sprawling all over the place with lots of duplication.

Built-in Features

The Django documentation includes a large set of built-in tags that you can use in your projects.

One of the most used built-in tags aside from what we’ve already covered is the url tag.

You could do this:

# application/views.py from django.shortcuts import render from django.urls import reverse def the_view (request): context = { 'the_url' : reverse( 'a_named_view' )} return render(request, 'a_template.html' , context)

Instead, our template can directly create the proper URL. Here’s what a_template.html might look like instead:

<a href=" {% url "a_named_view" %} ">Go to a named view</a>

The url tag is the template equivalent of the reverse function.

There is another kind of built-in that we have not looked at yet. These alternative built-in functions are called filters. Filters change the output of variables in your templates.

Here's a filter example: {{ a_variable | some_filter :"filter arguments" }}

A very common filter is the date filter. When you pass a Python datetime instance in the context, you can use the date filter to control the format of the datetime. The date documentation shows what options you can use to modify the format.

{{ a_datetime | date :"Y-m-d" }}

If a_datetime was an instance of April Fools’ Day, then it could return a string like 2020-04-01 . The date filter has many specifiers that will enable you to produce most date formatting outputs that you could think of.

default is a useful filter for when your template value evaluates to False .

{{ a_variable | default :"Nothing to see here." }}

If you create a form (which we’ll explore in the next episode) and accept a text area field where the user is allowed to provide newlines, then the linebreaks filter is great if you want to display those newlines later when rendering the user’s data. By default, HTML will not show new line characters as intended. The linebreaks filter will convert

to a <br> HTML tag. Handy!

pluralize is a convenient tag for the times when your text considers counts of things. Consider a count of items.

{{ count_items }} item {{ count_items | pluralize }}

The pluralize tag will do the right thing if there are zero, one, or more items in the list.

0 items 1 item 2 items 3 items (and so on)

yesno is good for converting True|False|None into a meaningful text message.

{{ user.name }} has {{ user_accepted | yesno :"accepted,declined,not RSVPed" }} .

Depending on the value of user_accepted , the template will display something meaningful to a reader.

When you need to build your own template tags or filters, Django gives you the tools to make what you need.

There are three major elements to working with custom tags:

Defining your tags in a place that Django expects. Registering your tags with the template engine. Loading your tags in a template so they can be used.

The first step is to put the tags in the correct location. To do that, we need a templatetags Python package inside of a Django application. We also need a module in that directory. Choose the module name carefully because it is what we will load in the template later on.

application ├── templatetags │ ├── __init__.py │ └── custom_tags.py ├── __init__.py ├── ... ├── models.py └── views.py

# application/templatetags/custom_tags.py import random from django import template register = template . Library() @register.filter def add_pizzazz (value): pieces_of_flair = [ ' Amazing!' , ' Wowza!' , ' Unbelievable!' ] return value + random . choice(pieces_of_flair)

Now, if we have a message variable, we can give it some pizzazz. To use the custom filter, we must load our tags module into the template with the load tag.

{% load custom_tags %} {{ message | add_pizzazz }}

Writing basic custom tags is very similar to custom filters. Code will speak better than words here.

# application/templatetags/custom_tags.py import random from django import template register = template . Library() @register.simple_tag def champion_welcome (name, level): if level > 42 : welcome = f "Hello great champion {name}!" elif level > 20 : welcome = f "Greetings noble warrior {name}!" elif level > 5 : welcome = f "Hello {name}." else : welcome = "Oh, it's you." return welcome

We can load the custom tags and use our tag like any other built-in tag.

{% load custom_tags %} {% champion_welcome "He-Man" 50 %}

There are some more advanced custom tagging features which you can explore in the Django custom template tags documentation.

Summary

Now we’ve seen templates in action! We’ve looked at:

How to set up templates for your site

Ways to call templates from views

How to use data

How to handle logic

Built-in tags and filters available to templates

Customizing templates with your own code extensions

Next Time

In the next episode, our focus will turn to forms. Forms are the primary tool that web pages use to accept data from users. We’ll see how Django helps us make forms quickly so our sites can interact with users.

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