Built-in template tags and filters¶
This document describes Django’s built-in template tags and filters. It is recommended that you use the automatic documentation, if available, as this will also include documentation for any custom tags or filters installed.
Built-in tag reference¶
autoescape
¶
Controls the current auto-escaping behavior. This tag takes either on
or
off
as an argument and that determines whether auto-escaping is in effect
inside the block. The block is closed with an endautoescape
ending tag.
When auto-escaping is in effect, all variable content has HTML escaping applied
to it before placing the result into the output (but after any filters have
been applied). This is equivalent to manually applying the escape
filter to each variable.
The only exceptions are variables that are already marked as “safe” from
escaping, either by the code that populated the variable, or because it has had
the safe
or escape
filters applied.
Sample usage:
{% autoescape on %}
{{ body }}
{% endautoescape %}
block
¶
Defines a block that can be overridden by child templates. See Template inheritance for more information.
comment
¶
Ignores everything between {% comment %}
and {% endcomment %}
.
An optional note may be inserted in the first tag. For example, this is
useful when commenting out code for documenting why the code was disabled.
Sample usage:
<p>Rendered text with {{ pub_date|date:"c" }}</p>
{% comment "Optional note" %}
<p>Commented out text with {{ create_date|date:"c" }}</p>
{% endcomment %}
comment
tags cannot be nested.
csrf_token
¶
This tag is used for CSRF protection, as described in the documentation for Cross Site Request Forgeries.
cycle
¶
Produces one of its arguments each time this tag is encountered. The first argument is produced on the first encounter, the second argument on the second encounter, and so forth. Once all arguments are exhausted, the tag cycles to the first argument and produces it again.
This tag is particularly useful in a loop:
{% for o in some_list %}
<tr class="{% cycle 'row1' 'row2' %}">
...
</tr>
{% endfor %}
The first iteration produces HTML that refers to class row1
, the second to
row2
, the third to row1
again, and so on for each iteration of the
loop.
You can use variables, too. For example, if you have two template variables,
rowvalue1
and rowvalue2
, you can alternate between their values like
this:
{% for o in some_list %}
<tr class="{% cycle rowvalue1 rowvalue2 %}">
...
</tr>
{% endfor %}
Variables included in the cycle will be escaped. You can disable auto-escaping with:
{% for o in some_list %}
<tr class="{% autoescape off %}{% cycle rowvalue1 rowvalue2 %}{% endautoescape %}">
...
</tr>
{% endfor %}
You can mix variables and strings:
{% for o in some_list %}
<tr class="{% cycle 'row1' rowvalue2 'row3' %}">
...
</tr>
{% endfor %}
In some cases you might want to refer to the current value of a cycle
without advancing to the next value. To do this,
just give the {% cycle %}
tag a name, using “as”, like this:
{% cycle 'row1' 'row2' as rowcolors %}
From then on, you can insert the current value of the cycle wherever you’d like
in your template by referencing the cycle name as a context variable. If you
want to move the cycle to the next value independently of the original
cycle
tag, you can use another cycle
tag and specify the name of the
variable. So, the following template:
<tr>
<td class="{% cycle 'row1' 'row2' as rowcolors %}">...</td>
<td class="{{ rowcolors }}">...</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="{% cycle rowcolors %}">...</td>
<td class="{{ rowcolors }}">...</td>
</tr>
would output:
<tr>
<td class="row1">...</td>
<td class="row1">...</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="row2">...</td>
<td class="row2">...</td>
</tr>
You can use any number of values in a cycle
tag, separated by spaces.
Values enclosed in single quotes ('
) or double quotes ("
) are treated
as string literals, while values without quotes are treated as template
variables.
By default, when you use the as
keyword with the cycle tag, the
usage of {% cycle %}
that initiates the cycle will itself produce
the first value in the cycle. This could be a problem if you want to
use the value in a nested loop or an included template. If you only want
to declare the cycle but not produce the first value, you can add a
silent
keyword as the last keyword in the tag. For example:
{% for obj in some_list %}
{% cycle 'row1' 'row2' as rowcolors silent %}
<tr class="{{ rowcolors }}">{% include "subtemplate.html" %}</tr>
{% endfor %}
This will output a list of <tr>
elements with class
alternating between row1
and row2
. The subtemplate will have
access to rowcolors
in its context and the value will match the class
of the <tr>
that encloses it. If the silent
keyword were to be
omitted, row1
and row2
would be emitted as normal text, outside the
<tr>
element.
When the silent keyword is used on a cycle definition, the silence
automatically applies to all subsequent uses of that specific cycle tag.
The following template would output nothing, even though the second
call to {% cycle %}
doesn’t specify silent
:
{% cycle 'row1' 'row2' as rowcolors silent %}
{% cycle rowcolors %}
You can use the resetcycle
tag to make a {% cycle %}
tag restart
from its first value when it’s next encountered.
debug
¶
Outputs a whole load of debugging information, including the current context and imported modules.
extends
¶
Signals that this template extends a parent template.
This tag can be used in two ways:
{% extends "base.html" %}
(with quotes) uses the literal value"base.html"
as the name of the parent template to extend.{% extends variable %}
uses the value ofvariable
. If the variable evaluates to a string, Django will use that string as the name of the parent template. If the variable evaluates to aTemplate
object, Django will use that object as the parent template.
See Template inheritance for more information.
Normally the template name is relative to the template loader’s root directory.
A string argument may also be a relative path starting with ./
or ../
.
For example, assume the following directory structure:
dir1/
template.html
base2.html
my/
base3.html
base1.html
In template.html
, the following paths would be valid:
{% extends "./base2.html" %}
{% extends "../base1.html" %}
{% extends "./my/base3.html" %}
The ability to use relative paths was added.
filter
¶
Filters the contents of the block through one or more filters. Multiple filters can be specified with pipes and filters can have arguments, just as in variable syntax.
Note that the block includes all the text between the filter
and
endfilter
tags.
Sample usage:
{% filter force_escape|lower %}
This text will be HTML-escaped, and will appear in all lowercase.
{% endfilter %}
Note
The escape
and safe
filters are not acceptable
arguments. Instead, use the autoescape
tag to manage autoescaping
for blocks of template code.
firstof
¶
Outputs the first argument variable that is not False
. Outputs nothing if
all the passed variables are False
.
Sample usage:
{% firstof var1 var2 var3 %}
This is equivalent to:
{% if var1 %}
{{ var1 }}
{% elif var2 %}
{{ var2 }}
{% elif var3 %}
{{ var3 }}
{% endif %}
You can also use a literal string as a fallback value in case all passed variables are False:
{% firstof var1 var2 var3 "fallback value" %}
This tag auto-escapes variable values. You can disable auto-escaping with:
{% autoescape off %}
{% firstof var1 var2 var3 "<strong>fallback value</strong>" %}
{% endautoescape %}
Or if only some variables should be escaped, you can use:
{% firstof var1 var2|safe var3 "<strong>fallback value</strong>"|safe %}
You can use the syntax {% firstof var1 var2 var3 as value %}
to store the
output inside a variable.
for
¶
Loops over each item in an array, making the item available in a context
variable. For example, to display a list of athletes provided in
athlete_list
:
<ul>
{% for athlete in athlete_list %}
<li>{{ athlete.name }}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
You can loop over a list in reverse by using
{% for obj in list reversed %}
.
If you need to loop over a list of lists, you can unpack the values
in each sublist into individual variables. For example, if your context
contains a list of (x,y) coordinates called points
, you could use the
following to output the list of points:
{% for x, y in points %}
There is a point at {{ x }},{{ y }}
{% endfor %}
This can also be useful if you need to access the items in a dictionary.
For example, if your context contained a dictionary data
, the following
would display the keys and values of the dictionary:
{% for key, value in data.items %}
{{ key }}: {{ value }}
{% endfor %}
Keep in mind that for the dot operator, dictionary key lookup takes precedence
over method lookup. Therefore if the data
dictionary contains a key named
'items'
, data.items
will return data['items']
instead of
data.items()
. Avoid adding keys that are named like dictionary methods if
you want to use those methods in a template (items
, values
, keys
,
etc.). Read more about the lookup order of the dot operator in the
documentation of template variables.
The for loop sets a number of variables available within the loop:
Variable | Description |
---|---|
forloop.counter |
The current iteration of the loop (1-indexed) |
forloop.counter0 |
The current iteration of the loop (0-indexed) |
forloop.revcounter |
The number of iterations from the end of the loop (1-indexed) |
forloop.revcounter0 |
The number of iterations from the end of the loop (0-indexed) |
forloop.first |
True if this is the first time through the loop |
forloop.last |
True if this is the last time through the loop |
forloop.parentloop |
For nested loops, this is the loop surrounding the current one |
for
… empty
¶
The for
tag can take an optional {% empty %}
clause whose text is
displayed if the given array is empty or could not be found:
<ul>
{% for athlete in athlete_list %}
<li>{{ athlete.name }}</li>
{% empty %}
<li>Sorry, no athletes in this list.</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
The above is equivalent to – but shorter, cleaner, and possibly faster than – the following:
<ul>
{% if athlete_list %}
{% for athlete in athlete_list %}
<li>{{ athlete.name }}</li>
{% endfor %}
{% else %}
<li>Sorry, no athletes in this list.</li>
{% endif %}
</ul>
if
¶
The {% if %}
tag evaluates a variable, and if that variable is “true” (i.e.
exists, is not empty, and is not a false boolean value) the contents of the
block are output:
{% if athlete_list %}
Number of athletes: {{ athlete_list|length }}
{% elif athlete_in_locker_room_list %}
Athletes should be out of the locker room soon!
{% else %}
No athletes.
{% endif %}
In the above, if athlete_list
is not empty, the number of athletes will be
displayed by the {{ athlete_list|length }}
variable.
As you can see, the if
tag may take one or several {% elif %}
clauses, as well as an {% else %}
clause that will be displayed if all
previous conditions fail. These clauses are optional.
Boolean operators¶
if
tags may use and
, or
or not
to test a number of
variables or to negate a given variable:
{% if athlete_list and coach_list %}
Both athletes and coaches are available.
{% endif %}
{% if not athlete_list %}
There are no athletes.
{% endif %}
{% if athlete_list or coach_list %}
There are some athletes or some coaches.
{% endif %}
{% if not athlete_list or coach_list %}
There are no athletes or there are some coaches.
{% endif %}
{% if athlete_list and not coach_list %}
There are some athletes and absolutely no coaches.
{% endif %}
Use of both and
and or
clauses within the same tag is allowed, with
and
having higher precedence than or
e.g.:
{% if athlete_list and coach_list or cheerleader_list %}
will be interpreted like:
if (athlete_list and coach_list) or cheerleader_list
Use of actual parentheses in the if
tag is invalid syntax. If you need
them to indicate precedence, you should use nested if
tags.
if
tags may also use the operators ==
, !=
, <
, >
,
<=
, >=
, in
, not in
, is
, and is not
which work as
follows:
==
operator¶
Equality. Example:
{% if somevar == "x" %}
This appears if variable somevar equals the string "x"
{% endif %}
!=
operator¶
Inequality. Example:
{% if somevar != "x" %}
This appears if variable somevar does not equal the string "x",
or if somevar is not found in the context
{% endif %}
<
operator¶
Less than. Example:
{% if somevar < 100 %}
This appears if variable somevar is less than 100.
{% endif %}
>
operator¶
Greater than. Example:
{% if somevar > 0 %}
This appears if variable somevar is greater than 0.
{% endif %}
<=
operator¶
Less than or equal to. Example:
{% if somevar <= 100 %}
This appears if variable somevar is less than 100 or equal to 100.
{% endif %}
>=
operator¶
Greater than or equal to. Example:
{% if somevar >= 1 %}
This appears if variable somevar is greater than 1 or equal to 1.
{% endif %}
in
operator¶
Contained within. This operator is supported by many Python containers to test
whether the given value is in the container. The following are some examples
of how x in y
will be interpreted:
{% if "bc" in "abcdef" %}
This appears since "bc" is a substring of "abcdef"
{% endif %}
{% if "hello" in greetings %}
If greetings is a list or set, one element of which is the string
"hello", this will appear.
{% endif %}
{% if user in users %}
If users is a QuerySet, this will appear if user is an
instance that belongs to the QuerySet.
{% endif %}
not in
operator¶
Not contained within. This is the negation of the in
operator.
is
operator¶
Object identity. Tests if two values are the same object. Example:
{% if somevar is True %}
This appears if and only if somevar is True.
{% endif %}
{% if somevar is None %}
This appears if somevar is None, or if somevar is not found in the context.
{% endif %}
is not
operator¶
Negated object identity. Tests if two values are not the same object. This is
the negation of the is
operator. Example:
{% if somevar is not True %}
This appears if somevar is not True, or if somevar is not found in the
context.
{% endif %}
{% if somevar is not None %}
This appears if and only if somevar is not None.
{% endif %}
Filters¶
You can also use filters in the if
expression. For example:
{% if messages|length >= 100 %}
You have lots of messages today!
{% endif %}
Complex expressions¶
All of the above can be combined to form complex expressions. For such expressions, it can be important to know how the operators are grouped when the expression is evaluated - that is, the precedence rules. The precedence of the operators, from lowest to highest, is as follows:
or
and
not
in
==
,!=
,<
,>
,<=
,>=
(This follows Python exactly). So, for example, the following complex
if
tag:
{% if a == b or c == d and e %}
…will be interpreted as:
(a == b) or ((c == d) and e)
If you need different precedence, you will need to use nested if
tags.
Sometimes that is better for clarity anyway, for the sake of those who do not
know the precedence rules.
The comparison operators cannot be ‘chained’ like in Python or in mathematical notation. For example, instead of using:
{% if a > b > c %} (WRONG)
you should use:
{% if a > b and b > c %}
ifequal
and ifnotequal
¶
{% ifequal a b %} ... {% endifequal %}
is an obsolete way to write
{% if a == b %} ... {% endif %}
. Likewise, {% ifnotequal a b %} ...
{% endifnotequal %}
is superseded by {% if a != b %} ... {% endif %}
.
The ifequal
and ifnotequal
tags will be deprecated in a future release.
ifchanged
¶
Check if a value has changed from the last iteration of a loop.
The {% ifchanged %}
block tag is used within a loop. It has two possible
uses.
Checks its own rendered contents against its previous state and only displays the content if it has changed. For example, this displays a list of days, only displaying the month if it changes:
<h1>Archive for {{ year }}</h1> {% for date in days %} {% ifchanged %}<h3>{{ date|date:"F" }}</h3>{% endifchanged %} <a href="{{ date|date:"M/d"|lower }}/">{{ date|date:"j" }}</a> {% endfor %}
If given one or more variables, check whether any variable has changed. For example, the following shows the date every time it changes, while showing the hour if either the hour or the date has changed:
{% for date in days %} {% ifchanged date.date %} {{ date.date }} {% endifchanged %} {% ifchanged date.hour date.date %} {{ date.hour }} {% endifchanged %} {% endfor %}
The ifchanged
tag can also take an optional {% else %}
clause that
will be displayed if the value has not changed:
{% for match in matches %}
<div style="background-color:
{% ifchanged match.ballot_id %}
{% cycle "red" "blue" %}
{% else %}
gray
{% endifchanged %}
">{{ match }}</div>
{% endfor %}
include
¶
Loads a template and renders it with the current context. This is a way of “including” other templates within a template.
The template name can either be a variable or a hard-coded (quoted) string, in either single or double quotes.
This example includes the contents of the template "foo/bar.html"
:
{% include "foo/bar.html" %}
Normally the template name is relative to the template loader’s root directory.
A string argument may also be a relative path starting with ./
or ../
as described in the extends
tag.
The ability to use a relative path was added.
This example includes the contents of the template whose name is contained in
the variable template_name
:
{% include template_name %}
The variable may also be any object with a render()
method that accepts a
context. This allows you to reference a compiled Template
in your context.
An included template is rendered within the context of the template that
includes it. This example produces the output "Hello, John!"
:
Context: variable
person
is set to"John"
and variablegreeting
is set to"Hello"
.Template:
{% include "name_snippet.html" %}
The
name_snippet.html
template:{{ greeting }}, {{ person|default:"friend" }}!
You can pass additional context to the template using keyword arguments:
{% include "name_snippet.html" with person="Jane" greeting="Hello" %}
If you want to render the context only with the variables provided (or even
no variables at all), use the only
option. No other variables are
available to the included template:
{% include "name_snippet.html" with greeting="Hi" only %}
If the included template causes an exception while it’s rendered (including
if it’s missing or has syntax errors), the behavior varies depending on the
template engine's
debug
option (if not
set, this option defaults to the value of DEBUG
). When debug mode is
turned on, an exception like TemplateDoesNotExist
or
TemplateSyntaxError
will be raised. When debug mode
is turned off, {% include %}
logs a warning to the django.template
logger with the exception that happens while rendering the included template
and returns an empty string.
Deprecated since version 1.11: Silencing exceptions raised while rendering the {% include %}
template
tag is deprecated. In Django 2.1, the exception will be raised.
Note
The include
tag should be considered as an implementation of
“render this subtemplate and include the HTML”, not as “parse this
subtemplate and include its contents as if it were part of the parent”.
This means that there is no shared state between included templates –
each include is a completely independent rendering process.
Blocks are evaluated before they are included. This means that a template that includes blocks from another will contain blocks that have already been evaluated and rendered - not blocks that can be overridden by, for example, an extending template.
load
¶
Loads a custom template tag set.
For example, the following template would load all the tags and filters
registered in somelibrary
and otherlibrary
located in package
package
:
{% load somelibrary package.otherlibrary %}
You can also selectively load individual filters or tags from a library, using
the from
argument. In this example, the template tags/filters named foo
and bar
will be loaded from somelibrary
:
{% load foo bar from somelibrary %}
See Custom tag and filter libraries for more information.
lorem
¶
Displays random “lorem ipsum” Latin text. This is useful for providing sample data in templates.
Usage:
{% lorem [count] [method] [random] %}
The {% lorem %}
tag can be used with zero, one, two or three arguments.
The arguments are:
Argument | Description |
---|---|
count |
A number (or variable) containing the number of paragraphs or words to generate (default is 1). |
method |
Either w for words, p for HTML paragraphs or b
for plain-text paragraph blocks (default is b ). |
random |
The word random , which if given, does not use the common
paragraph (“Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet…”) when generating
text. |
Examples:
{% lorem %}
will output the common “lorem ipsum” paragraph.{% lorem 3 p %}
will output the common “lorem ipsum” paragraph and two random paragraphs each wrapped in HTML<p>
tags.{% lorem 2 w random %}
will output two random Latin words.
now
¶
Displays the current date and/or time, using a format according to the given
string. Such string can contain format specifiers characters as described
in the date
filter section.
Example:
It is {% now "jS F Y H:i" %}
Note that you can backslash-escape a format string if you want to use the “raw” value. In this example, both “o” and “f” are backslash-escaped, because otherwise each is a format string that displays the year and the time, respectively:
It is the {% now "jS \o\f F" %}
This would display as “It is the 4th of September”.
Note
The format passed can also be one of the predefined ones
DATE_FORMAT
, DATETIME_FORMAT
,
SHORT_DATE_FORMAT
or SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT
.
The predefined formats may vary depending on the current locale and
if Format localization is enabled, e.g.:
It is {% now "SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT" %}
You can also use the syntax {% now "Y" as current_year %}
to store the
output (as a string) inside a variable. This is useful if you want to use
{% now %}
inside a template tag like blocktrans
for example:
{% now "Y" as current_year %}
{% blocktrans %}Copyright {{ current_year }}{% endblocktrans %}
regroup
¶
Regroups a list of alike objects by a common attribute.
This complex tag is best illustrated by way of an example: say that cities
is a list of cities represented by dictionaries containing "name"
,
"population"
, and "country"
keys:
cities = [
{'name': 'Mumbai', 'population': '19,000,000', 'country': 'India'},
{'name': 'Calcutta', 'population': '15,000,000', 'country': 'India'},
{'name': 'New York', 'population': '20,000,000', 'country': 'USA'},
{'name': 'Chicago', 'population': '7,000,000', 'country': 'USA'},
{'name': 'Tokyo', 'population': '33,000,000', 'country': 'Japan'},
]
…and you’d like to display a hierarchical list that is ordered by country, like this:
- India
- Mumbai: 19,000,000
- Calcutta: 15,000,000
- USA
- New York: 20,000,000
- Chicago: 7,000,000
- Japan
- Tokyo: 33,000,000
You can use the {% regroup %}
tag to group the list of cities by country.
The following snippet of template code would accomplish this:
{% regroup cities by country as country_list %}
<ul>
{% for country in country_list %}
<li>{{ country.grouper }}
<ul>
{% for city in country.list %}
<li>{{ city.name }}: {{ city.population }}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
Let’s walk through this example. {% regroup %}
takes three arguments: the
list you want to regroup, the attribute to group by, and the name of the
resulting list. Here, we’re regrouping the cities
list by the country
attribute and calling the result country_list
.
{% regroup %}
produces a list (in this case, country_list
) of
group objects. Group objects are instances of
namedtuple()
with two fields:
grouper
– the item that was grouped by (e.g., the string “India” or “Japan”).list
– a list of all items in this group (e.g., a list of all cities with country=’India’).
The group object was changed from a dictionary to a
namedtuple()
.
Because {% regroup %}
produces namedtuple()
objects,
you can also write the previous example as:
{% regroup cities by country as country_list %}
<ul>
{% for country, local_cities in country_list %}
<li>{{ country }}
<ul>
{% for city in local_cities %}
<li>{{ city.name }}: {{ city.population }}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
Note that {% regroup %}
does not order its input! Our example relies on
the fact that the cities
list was ordered by country
in the first place.
If the cities
list did not order its members by country
, the
regrouping would naively display more than one group for a single country. For
example, say the cities
list was set to this (note that the countries are not
grouped together):
cities = [
{'name': 'Mumbai', 'population': '19,000,000', 'country': 'India'},
{'name': 'New York', 'population': '20,000,000', 'country': 'USA'},
{'name': 'Calcutta', 'population': '15,000,000', 'country': 'India'},
{'name': 'Chicago', 'population': '7,000,000', 'country': 'USA'},
{'name': 'Tokyo', 'population': '33,000,000', 'country': 'Japan'},
]
With this input for cities
, the example {% regroup %}
template code
above would result in the following output:
- India
- Mumbai: 19,000,000
- USA
- New York: 20,000,000
- India
- Calcutta: 15,000,000
- USA
- Chicago: 7,000,000
- Japan
- Tokyo: 33,000,000
The easiest solution to this gotcha is to make sure in your view code that the data is ordered according to how you want to display it.
Another solution is to sort the data in the template using the
dictsort
filter, if your data is in a list of dictionaries:
{% regroup cities|dictsort:"country" by country as country_list %}
Grouping on other properties¶
Any valid template lookup is a legal grouping attribute for the regroup tag, including methods, attributes, dictionary keys and list items. For example, if the “country” field is a foreign key to a class with an attribute “description,” you could use:
{% regroup cities by country.description as country_list %}
Or, if country
is a field with choices
, it will have a
get_FOO_display()
method available as an
attribute, allowing you to group on the display string rather than the
choices
key:
{% regroup cities by get_country_display as country_list %}
{{ country.grouper }}
will now display the value fields from the
choices
set rather than the keys.
resetcycle
¶
Resets a previous cycle so that it restarts from its first item at its next
encounter. Without arguments, {% resetcycle %}
will reset the last
{% cycle %}
defined in the template.
Example usage:
{% for coach in coach_list %}
<h1>{{ coach.name }}</h1>
{% for athlete in coach.athlete_set.all %}
<p class="{% cycle 'odd' 'even' %}">{{ athlete.name }}</p>
{% endfor %}
{% resetcycle %}
{% endfor %}
This example would return this HTML:
<h1>José Mourinho</h1>
<p class="odd">Thibaut Courtois</p>
<p class="even">John Terry</p>
<p class="odd">Eden Hazard</p>
<h1>Carlo Ancelotti</h1>
<p class="odd">Manuel Neuer</p>
<p class="even">Thomas Müller</p>
Notice how the first block ends with class="odd"
and the new one starts
with class="odd"
. Without the {% resetcycle %}
tag, the second block
would start with class="even"
.
You can also reset named cycle tags:
{% for item in list %}
<p class="{% cycle 'odd' 'even' as stripe %} {% cycle 'major' 'minor' 'minor' 'minor' 'minor' as tick %}">
{{ item.data }}
</p>
{% ifchanged item.category %}
<h1>{{ item.category }}</h1>
{% if not forloop.first %}{% resetcycle tick %}{% endif %}
{% endifchanged %}
{% endfor %}
In this example, we have both the alternating odd/even rows and a “major” row every fifth row. Only the five-row cycle is reset when a category changes.
spaceless
¶
Removes whitespace between HTML tags. This includes tab characters and newlines.
Example usage:
{% spaceless %}
<p>
<a href="foo/">Foo</a>
</p>
{% endspaceless %}
This example would return this HTML:
<p><a href="foo/">Foo</a></p>
Only space between tags is removed – not space between tags and text. In
this example, the space around Hello
won’t be stripped:
{% spaceless %}
<strong>
Hello
</strong>
{% endspaceless %}
templatetag
¶
Outputs one of the syntax characters used to compose template tags.
Since the template system has no concept of “escaping”, to display one of the
bits used in template tags, you must use the {% templatetag %}
tag.
The argument tells which template bit to output:
Argument | Outputs |
---|---|
openblock |
{% |
closeblock |
%} |
openvariable |
{{ |
closevariable |
}} |
openbrace |
{ |
closebrace |
} |
opencomment |
{# |
closecomment |
#} |
Sample usage:
{% templatetag openblock %} url 'entry_list' {% templatetag closeblock %}
url
¶
Returns an absolute path reference (a URL without the domain name) matching a
given view and optional parameters. Any special characters in the resulting
path will be encoded using iri_to_uri()
.
This is a way to output links without violating the DRY principle by having to hard-code URLs in your templates:
{% url 'some-url-name' v1 v2 %}
The first argument is a url()
name
. It can be a
quoted literal or any other context variable. Additional arguments are optional
and should be space-separated values that will be used as arguments in the URL.
The example above shows passing positional arguments. Alternatively you may
use keyword syntax:
{% url 'some-url-name' arg1=v1 arg2=v2 %}
Do not mix both positional and keyword syntax in a single call. All arguments required by the URLconf should be present.
For example, suppose you have a view, app_views.client
, whose URLconf
takes a client ID (here, client()
is a method inside the views file
app_views.py
). The URLconf line might look like this:
('^client/([0-9]+)/$', app_views.client, name='app-views-client')
If this app’s URLconf is included into the project’s URLconf under a path such as this:
('^clients/', include('project_name.app_name.urls'))
…then, in a template, you can create a link to this view like this:
{% url 'app-views-client' client.id %}
The template tag will output the string /clients/client/123/
.
Note that if the URL you’re reversing doesn’t exist, you’ll get an
NoReverseMatch
exception raised, which will cause your
site to display an error page.
If you’d like to retrieve a URL without displaying it, you can use a slightly different call:
{% url 'some-url-name' arg arg2 as the_url %}
<a href="{{ the_url }}">I'm linking to {{ the_url }}</a>
The scope of the variable created by the as var
syntax is the
{% block %}
in which the {% url %}
tag appears.
This {% url ... as var %}
syntax will not cause an error if the view is
missing. In practice you’ll use this to link to views that are optional:
{% url 'some-url-name' as the_url %}
{% if the_url %}
<a href="{{ the_url }}">Link to optional stuff</a>
{% endif %}
If you’d like to retrieve a namespaced URL, specify the fully qualified name:
{% url 'myapp:view-name' %}
This will follow the normal namespaced URL resolution strategy, including using any hints provided by the context as to the current application.
Warning
Don’t forget to put quotes around the url()
name
, otherwise the value will be interpreted as a context variable!
verbatim
¶
Stops the template engine from rendering the contents of this block tag.
A common use is to allow a JavaScript template layer that collides with Django’s syntax. For example:
{% verbatim %}
{{if dying}}Still alive.{{/if}}
{% endverbatim %}
You can also designate a specific closing tag, allowing the use of
{% endverbatim %}
as part of the unrendered contents:
{% verbatim myblock %}
Avoid template rendering via the {% verbatim %}{% endverbatim %} block.
{% endverbatim myblock %}
widthratio
¶
For creating bar charts and such, this tag calculates the ratio of a given value to a maximum value, and then applies that ratio to a constant.
For example:
<img src="bar.png" alt="Bar"
height="10" width="{% widthratio this_value max_value max_width %}" />
If this_value
is 175, max_value
is 200, and max_width
is 100, the
image in the above example will be 88 pixels wide
(because 175/200 = .875; .875 * 100 = 87.5 which is rounded up to 88).
In some cases you might want to capture the result of widthratio
in a
variable. It can be useful, for instance, in a blocktrans
like this:
{% widthratio this_value max_value max_width as width %}
{% blocktrans %}The width is: {{ width }}{% endblocktrans %}
with
¶
Caches a complex variable under a simpler name. This is useful when accessing an “expensive” method (e.g., one that hits the database) multiple times.
For example:
{% with total=business.employees.count %}
{{ total }} employee{{ total|pluralize }}
{% endwith %}
The populated variable (in the example above, total
) is only available
between the {% with %}
and {% endwith %}
tags.
You can assign more than one context variable:
{% with alpha=1 beta=2 %}
...
{% endwith %}
Note
The previous more verbose format is still supported:
{% with business.employees.count as total %}
Built-in filter reference¶
add
¶
Adds the argument to the value.
For example:
{{ value|add:"2" }}
If value
is 4
, then the output will be 6
.
This filter will first try to coerce both values to integers. If this fails, it’ll attempt to add the values together anyway. This will work on some data types (strings, list, etc.) and fail on others. If it fails, the result will be an empty string.
For example, if we have:
{{ first|add:second }}
and first
is [1, 2, 3]
and second
is [4, 5, 6]
, then the
output will be [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
.
Warning
Strings that can be coerced to integers will be summed, not concatenated, as in the first example above.
addslashes
¶
Adds slashes before quotes. Useful for escaping strings in CSV, for example.
For example:
{{ value|addslashes }}
If value
is "I'm using Django"
, the output will be
"I\'m using Django"
.
capfirst
¶
Capitalizes the first character of the value. If the first character is not a letter, this filter has no effect.
For example:
{{ value|capfirst }}
If value
is "django"
, the output will be "Django"
.
center
¶
Centers the value in a field of a given width.
For example:
"{{ value|center:"15" }}"
If value
is "Django"
, the output will be " Django "
.
cut
¶
Removes all values of arg from the given string.
For example:
{{ value|cut:" " }}
If value
is "String with spaces"
, the output will be
"Stringwithspaces"
.
date
¶
Formats a date according to the given format.
Uses a similar format as PHP’s date()
function (https://php.net/date)
with some differences.
Note
These format characters are not used in Django outside of templates. They were designed to be compatible with PHP to ease transitioning for designers.
Available format strings:
Format character | Description | Example output |
---|---|---|
a | 'a.m.' or 'p.m.' (Note that
this is slightly different than PHP’s
output, because this includes periods
to match Associated Press style.) |
'a.m.' |
A | 'AM' or 'PM' . |
'AM' |
b | Month, textual, 3 letters, lowercase. | 'jan' |
B | Not implemented. | |
c | ISO 8601 format. (Note: unlike others
formatters, such as “Z”, “O” or “r”,
the “c” formatter will not add timezone
offset if value is a naive datetime
(see datetime.tzinfo ). |
2008-01-02T10:30:00.000123+02:00 ,
or 2008-01-02T10:30:00.000123 if the datetime is naive |
d | Day of the month, 2 digits with leading zeros. | '01' to '31' |
D | Day of the week, textual, 3 letters. | 'Fri' |
e | Timezone name. Could be in any format, or might return an empty string, depending on the datetime. | '' , 'GMT' , '-500' , 'US/Eastern' , etc. |
E | Month, locale specific alternative representation usually used for long date representation. | 'listopada' (for Polish locale, as opposed to 'Listopad' ) |
f | Time, in 12-hour hours and minutes, with minutes left off if they’re zero. Proprietary extension. | '1' , '1:30' |
F | Month, textual, long. | 'January' |
g | Hour, 12-hour format without leading zeros. | '1' to '12' |
G | Hour, 24-hour format without leading zeros. | '0' to '23' |
h | Hour, 12-hour format. | '01' to '12' |
H | Hour, 24-hour format. | '00' to '23' |
i | Minutes. | '00' to '59' |
I | Daylight Savings Time, whether it’s in effect or not. | '1' or '0' |
j | Day of the month without leading zeros. | '1' to '31' |
l | Day of the week, textual, long. | 'Friday' |
L | Boolean for whether it’s a leap year. | True or False |
m | Month, 2 digits with leading zeros. | '01' to '12' |
M | Month, textual, 3 letters. | 'Jan' |
n | Month without leading zeros. | '1' to '12' |
N | Month abbreviation in Associated Press style. Proprietary extension. | 'Jan.' , 'Feb.' , 'March' , 'May' |
o | ISO-8601 week-numbering year, corresponding to the ISO-8601 week number (W) which uses leap weeks. See Y for the more common year format. | '1999' |
O | Difference to Greenwich time in hours. | '+0200' |
P | Time, in 12-hour hours, minutes and ‘a.m.’/’p.m.’, with minutes left off if they’re zero and the special-case strings ‘midnight’ and ‘noon’ if appropriate. Proprietary extension. | '1 a.m.' , '1:30 p.m.' , 'midnight' , 'noon' , '12:30 p.m.' |
r | RFC 5322 formatted date. | 'Thu, 21 Dec 2000 16:01:07 +0200' |
s | Seconds, 2 digits with leading zeros. | '00' to '59' |
S | English ordinal suffix for day of the month, 2 characters. | 'st' , 'nd' , 'rd' or 'th' |
t | Number of days in the given month. | 28 to 31 |
T | Time zone of this machine. | 'EST' , 'MDT' |
u | Microseconds. | 000000 to 999999 |
U | Seconds since the Unix Epoch (January 1 1970 00:00:00 UTC). | |
w | Day of the week, digits without leading zeros. | '0' (Sunday) to '6' (Saturday) |
W | ISO-8601 week number of year, with weeks starting on Monday. | 1 , 53 |
y | Year, 2 digits. | '99' |
Y | Year, 4 digits. | '1999' |
z | Day of the year. | 0 to 365 |
Z | Time zone offset in seconds. The offset for timezones west of UTC is always negative, and for those east of UTC is always positive. | -43200 to 43200 |
For example:
{{ value|date:"D d M Y" }}
If value
is a datetime
object (e.g., the result of
datetime.datetime.now()
), the output will be the string
'Wed 09 Jan 2008'
.
The format passed can be one of the predefined ones DATE_FORMAT
,
DATETIME_FORMAT
, SHORT_DATE_FORMAT
or
SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT
, or a custom format that uses the format
specifiers shown in the table above. Note that predefined formats may vary
depending on the current locale.
Assuming that USE_L10N
is True
and LANGUAGE_CODE
is,
for example, "es"
, then for:
{{ value|date:"SHORT_DATE_FORMAT" }}
the output would be the string "09/01/2008"
(the "SHORT_DATE_FORMAT"
format specifier for the es
locale as shipped with Django is "d/m/Y"
).
When used without a format string, the DATE_FORMAT
format specifier is
used. Assuming the same settings as the previous example:
{{ value|date }}
outputs 9 de Enero de 2008
(the DATE_FORMAT
format specifier for the
es
locale is r'j \d\e F \d\e Y'
.
In older versions, the DATE_FORMAT
setting (without
localization) is always used when a format string isn’t given.
You can combine date
with the time
filter to render a full
representation of a datetime
value. E.g.:
{{ value|date:"D d M Y" }} {{ value|time:"H:i" }}
default
¶
If value evaluates to False
, uses the given default. Otherwise, uses the
value.
For example:
{{ value|default:"nothing" }}
If value
is ""
(the empty string), the output will be nothing
.
default_if_none
¶
If (and only if) value is None
, uses the given default. Otherwise, uses the
value.
Note that if an empty string is given, the default value will not be used.
Use the default
filter if you want to fallback for empty strings.
For example:
{{ value|default_if_none:"nothing" }}
If value
is None
, the output will be nothing
.
dictsort
¶
Takes a list of dictionaries and returns that list sorted by the key given in the argument.
For example:
{{ value|dictsort:"name" }}
If value
is:
[
{'name': 'zed', 'age': 19},
{'name': 'amy', 'age': 22},
{'name': 'joe', 'age': 31},
]
then the output would be:
[
{'name': 'amy', 'age': 22},
{'name': 'joe', 'age': 31},
{'name': 'zed', 'age': 19},
]
You can also do more complicated things like:
{% for book in books|dictsort:"author.age" %}
* {{ book.title }} ({{ book.author.name }})
{% endfor %}
If books
is:
[
{'title': '1984', 'author': {'name': 'George', 'age': 45}},
{'title': 'Timequake', 'author': {'name': 'Kurt', 'age': 75}},
{'title': 'Alice', 'author': {'name': 'Lewis', 'age': 33}},
]
then the output would be:
* Alice (Lewis)
* 1984 (George)
* Timequake (Kurt)
dictsort
can also order a list of lists (or any other object implementing
__getitem__()
) by elements at specified index. For example:
{{ value|dictsort:0 }}
If value
is:
[
('a', '42'),
('c', 'string'),
('b', 'foo'),
]
then the output would be:
[
('a', '42'),
('b', 'foo'),
('c', 'string'),
]
You must pass the index as an integer rather than a string. The following produce empty output:
{{ values|dictsort:"0" }}
The ability to order a list of lists was added.
dictsortreversed
¶
Takes a list of dictionaries and returns that list sorted in reverse order by the key given in the argument. This works exactly the same as the above filter, but the returned value will be in reverse order.
divisibleby
¶
Returns True
if the value is divisible by the argument.
For example:
{{ value|divisibleby:"3" }}
If value
is 21
, the output would be True
.
escape
¶
Escapes a string’s HTML. Specifically, it makes these replacements:
<
is converted to<
>
is converted to>
'
(single quote) is converted to'
"
(double quote) is converted to"
&
is converted to&
The escaping is only applied when the string is output, so it does not matter
where in a chained sequence of filters you put escape
: it will always be
applied as though it were the last filter. If you want escaping to be applied
immediately, use the force_escape
filter.
Applying escape
to a variable that would normally have auto-escaping
applied to the result will only result in one round of escaping being done. So
it is safe to use this function even in auto-escaping environments. If you want
multiple escaping passes to be applied, use the force_escape
filter.
For example, you can apply escape
to fields when autoescape
is off:
{% autoescape off %}
{{ title|escape }}
{% endautoescape %}
Deprecated since version 1.10: The “lazy” behavior of the escape
filter is deprecated. It will change
to immediately apply conditional_escape()
in
Django 2.0.
escapejs
¶
Escapes characters for use in JavaScript strings. This does not make the string safe for use in HTML, but does protect you from syntax errors when using templates to generate JavaScript/JSON.
For example:
{{ value|escapejs }}
If value
is "testing\r\njavascript \'string" <b>escaping</b>"
,
the output will be "testing\\u000D\\u000Ajavascript \\u0027string\\u0022 \\u003Cb\\u003Eescaping\\u003C/b\\u003E"
.
filesizeformat
¶
Formats the value like a ‘human-readable’ file size (i.e. '13 KB'
,
'4.1 MB'
, '102 bytes'
, etc.).
For example:
{{ value|filesizeformat }}
If value
is 123456789, the output would be 117.7 MB
.
File sizes and SI units
Strictly speaking, filesizeformat
does not conform to the International
System of Units which recommends using KiB, MiB, GiB, etc. when byte sizes
are calculated in powers of 1024 (which is the case here). Instead, Django
uses traditional unit names (KB, MB, GB, etc.) corresponding to names that
are more commonly used.
first
¶
Returns the first item in a list.
For example:
{{ value|first }}
If value
is the list ['a', 'b', 'c']
, the output will be 'a'
.
floatformat
¶
When used without an argument, rounds a floating-point number to one decimal place – but only if there’s a decimal part to be displayed. For example:
value |
Template | Output |
---|---|---|
34.23234 |
{{ value|floatformat }} |
34.2 |
34.00000 |
{{ value|floatformat }} |
34 |
34.26000 |
{{ value|floatformat }} |
34.3 |
If used with a numeric integer argument, floatformat
rounds a number to
that many decimal places. For example:
value |
Template | Output |
---|---|---|
34.23234 |
{{ value|floatformat:3 }} |
34.232 |
34.00000 |
{{ value|floatformat:3 }} |
34.000 |
34.26000 |
{{ value|floatformat:3 }} |
34.260 |
Particularly useful is passing 0 (zero) as the argument which will round the float to the nearest integer.
value |
Template | Output |
---|---|---|
34.23234 |
{{ value|floatformat:"0" }} |
34 |
34.00000 |
{{ value|floatformat:"0" }} |
34 |
39.56000 |
{{ value|floatformat:"0" }} |
40 |
If the argument passed to floatformat
is negative, it will round a number
to that many decimal places – but only if there’s a decimal part to be
displayed. For example:
value |
Template | Output |
---|---|---|
34.23234 |
{{ value|floatformat:"-3" }} |
34.232 |
34.00000 |
{{ value|floatformat:"-3" }} |
34 |
34.26000 |
{{ value|floatformat:"-3" }} |
34.260 |
Using floatformat
with no argument is equivalent to using floatformat
with an argument of -1
.
force_escape
¶
Applies HTML escaping to a string (see the escape
filter for
details). This filter is applied immediately and returns a new, escaped
string. This is useful in the rare cases where you need multiple escaping or
want to apply other filters to the escaped results. Normally, you want to use
the escape
filter.
For example, if you want to catch the <p>
HTML elements created by
the linebreaks
filter:
{% autoescape off %}
{{ body|linebreaks|force_escape }}
{% endautoescape %}
get_digit
¶
Given a whole number, returns the requested digit, where 1 is the right-most digit, 2 is the second-right-most digit, etc. Returns the original value for invalid input (if input or argument is not an integer, or if argument is less than 1). Otherwise, output is always an integer.
For example:
{{ value|get_digit:"2" }}
If value
is 123456789
, the output will be 8
.
iriencode
¶
Converts an IRI (Internationalized Resource Identifier) to a string that is suitable for including in a URL. This is necessary if you’re trying to use strings containing non-ASCII characters in a URL.
It’s safe to use this filter on a string that has already gone through the
urlencode
filter.
For example:
{{ value|iriencode }}
If value
is "?test=1&me=2"
, the output will be "?test=1&me=2"
.
join
¶
Joins a list with a string, like Python’s str.join(list)
For example:
{{ value|join:" // " }}
If value
is the list ['a', 'b', 'c']
, the output will be the string
"a // b // c"
.
last
¶
Returns the last item in a list.
For example:
{{ value|last }}
If value
is the list ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']
, the output will be the
string "d"
.
length
¶
Returns the length of the value. This works for both strings and lists.
For example:
{{ value|length }}
If value
is ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']
or "abcd"
, the output will be
4
.
The filter returns 0
for an undefined variable.
length_is
¶
Returns True
if the value’s length is the argument, or False
otherwise.
For example:
{{ value|length_is:"4" }}
If value
is ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']
or "abcd"
, the output will be
True
.
linebreaks
¶
Replaces line breaks in plain text with appropriate HTML; a single
newline becomes an HTML line break (<br />
) and a new line
followed by a blank line becomes a paragraph break (</p>
).
For example:
{{ value|linebreaks }}
If value
is Joel\nis a slug
, the output will be <p>Joel<br />is a
slug</p>
.
linebreaksbr
¶
Converts all newlines in a piece of plain text to HTML line breaks
(<br />
).
For example:
{{ value|linebreaksbr }}
If value
is Joel\nis a slug
, the output will be Joel<br />is a
slug
.
linenumbers
¶
Displays text with line numbers.
For example:
{{ value|linenumbers }}
If value
is:
one
two
three
the output will be:
1. one
2. two
3. three
ljust
¶
Left-aligns the value in a field of a given width.
Argument: field size
For example:
"{{ value|ljust:"10" }}"
If value
is Django
, the output will be "Django "
.
lower
¶
Converts a string into all lowercase.
For example:
{{ value|lower }}
If value
is Totally LOVING this Album!
, the output will be
totally loving this album!
.
make_list
¶
Returns the value turned into a list. For a string, it’s a list of characters. For an integer, the argument is cast into an unicode string before creating a list.
For example:
{{ value|make_list }}
If value
is the string "Joel"
, the output would be the list
['J', 'o', 'e', 'l']
. If value
is 123
, the output will be the
list ['1', '2', '3']
.
phone2numeric
¶
Converts a phone number (possibly containing letters) to its numerical equivalent.
The input doesn’t have to be a valid phone number. This will happily convert any string.
For example:
{{ value|phone2numeric }}
If value
is 800-COLLECT
, the output will be 800-2655328
.
pluralize
¶
Returns a plural suffix if the value is not 1. By default, this suffix is
's'
.
Example:
You have {{ num_messages }} message{{ num_messages|pluralize }}.
If num_messages
is 1
, the output will be You have 1 message.
If num_messages
is 2
the output will be You have 2 messages.
For words that require a suffix other than 's'
, you can provide an alternate
suffix as a parameter to the filter.
Example:
You have {{ num_walruses }} walrus{{ num_walruses|pluralize:"es" }}.
For words that don’t pluralize by simple suffix, you can specify both a singular and plural suffix, separated by a comma.
Example:
You have {{ num_cherries }} cherr{{ num_cherries|pluralize:"y,ies" }}.
Note
Use blocktrans
to pluralize translated strings.
pprint
¶
A wrapper around pprint.pprint()
– for debugging, really.
random
¶
Returns a random item from the given list.
For example:
{{ value|random }}
If value
is the list ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']
, the output could be "b"
.
rjust
¶
Right-aligns the value in a field of a given width.
Argument: field size
For example:
"{{ value|rjust:"10" }}"
If value
is Django
, the output will be " Django"
.
safe
¶
Marks a string as not requiring further HTML escaping prior to output. When autoescaping is off, this filter has no effect.
Note
If you are chaining filters, a filter applied after safe
can
make the contents unsafe again. For example, the following code
prints the variable as is, unescaped:
{{ var|safe|escape }}
safeseq
¶
Applies the safe
filter to each element of a sequence. Useful in
conjunction with other filters that operate on sequences, such as
join
. For example:
{{ some_list|safeseq|join:", " }}
You couldn’t use the safe
filter directly in this case, as it would
first convert the variable into a string, rather than working with the
individual elements of the sequence.
slice
¶
Returns a slice of the list.
Uses the same syntax as Python’s list slicing. See http://www.diveintopython3.net/native-datatypes.html#slicinglists for an introduction.
Example:
{{ some_list|slice:":2" }}
If some_list
is ['a', 'b', 'c']
, the output will be ['a', 'b']
.
slugify
¶
Converts to ASCII. Converts spaces to hyphens. Removes characters that aren’t alphanumerics, underscores, or hyphens. Converts to lowercase. Also strips leading and trailing whitespace.
For example:
{{ value|slugify }}
If value
is "Joel is a slug"
, the output will be "joel-is-a-slug"
.
stringformat
¶
Formats the variable according to the argument, a string formatting specifier. This specifier uses the printf-style String Formatting syntax, with the exception that the leading “%” is dropped.
For example:
{{ value|stringformat:"E" }}
If value
is 10
, the output will be 1.000000E+01
.
striptags
¶
Makes all possible efforts to strip all [X]HTML tags.
For example:
{{ value|striptags }}
If value
is "<b>Joel</b> <button>is</button> a <span>slug</span>"
, the
output will be "Joel is a slug"
.
No safety guarantee
Note that striptags
doesn’t give any guarantee about its output being
HTML safe, particularly with non valid HTML input. So NEVER apply the
safe
filter to a striptags
output. If you are looking for something
more robust, you can use the bleach
Python library, notably its
clean method.
time
¶
Formats a time according to the given format.
Given format can be the predefined one TIME_FORMAT
, or a custom
format, same as the date
filter. Note that the predefined format
is locale-dependent.
For example:
{{ value|time:"H:i" }}
If value
is equivalent to datetime.datetime.now()
, the output will be
the string "01:23"
.
Another example:
Assuming that USE_L10N
is True
and LANGUAGE_CODE
is,
for example, "de"
, then for:
{{ value|time:"TIME_FORMAT" }}
the output will be the string "01:23"
(The "TIME_FORMAT"
format
specifier for the de
locale as shipped with Django is "H:i"
).
The time
filter will only accept parameters in the format string that
relate to the time of day, not the date (for obvious reasons). If you need to
format a date
value, use the date
filter instead (or along
time
if you need to render a full datetime
value).
There is one exception the above rule: When passed a datetime
value with
attached timezone information (a time-zone-aware datetime
instance) the time
filter will
accept the timezone-related format specifiers 'e'
, 'O'
, 'T'
and 'Z'
.
When used without a format string, the TIME_FORMAT
format specifier is
used:
{{ value|time }}
is the same as:
{{ value|time:"TIME_FORMAT" }}
In older versions, the TIME_FORMAT
setting (without
localization) is always used when a format string isn’t given.
timesince
¶
Formats a date as the time since that date (e.g., “4 days, 6 hours”).
Takes an optional argument that is a variable containing the date to use as
the comparison point (without the argument, the comparison point is now).
For example, if blog_date
is a date instance representing midnight on 1
June 2006, and comment_date
is a date instance for 08:00 on 1 June 2006,
then the following would return “8 hours”:
{{ blog_date|timesince:comment_date }}
Comparing offset-naive and offset-aware datetimes will return an empty string.
Minutes is the smallest unit used, and “0 minutes” will be returned for any date that is in the future relative to the comparison point.
timeuntil
¶
Similar to timesince
, except that it measures the time from now until the
given date or datetime. For example, if today is 1 June 2006 and
conference_date
is a date instance holding 29 June 2006, then
{{ conference_date|timeuntil }}
will return “4 weeks”.
Takes an optional argument that is a variable containing the date to use as
the comparison point (instead of now). If from_date
contains 22 June
2006, then the following will return “1 week”:
{{ conference_date|timeuntil:from_date }}
Comparing offset-naive and offset-aware datetimes will return an empty string.
Minutes is the smallest unit used, and “0 minutes” will be returned for any date that is in the past relative to the comparison point.
title
¶
Converts a string into titlecase by making words start with an uppercase character and the remaining characters lowercase. This tag makes no effort to keep “trivial words” in lowercase.
For example:
{{ value|title }}
If value
is "my FIRST post"
, the output will be "My First Post"
.
truncatechars
¶
Truncates a string if it is longer than the specified number of characters. Truncated strings will end with a translatable ellipsis sequence (“…”).
Argument: Number of characters to truncate to
For example:
{{ value|truncatechars:9 }}
If value
is "Joel is a slug"
, the output will be "Joel i..."
.
truncatechars_html
¶
Similar to truncatechars
, except that it is aware of HTML tags. Any
tags that are opened in the string and not closed before the truncation point
are closed immediately after the truncation.
For example:
{{ value|truncatechars_html:9 }}
If value
is "<p>Joel is a slug</p>"
, the output will be
"<p>Joel i...</p>"
.
Newlines in the HTML content will be preserved.
truncatewords
¶
Truncates a string after a certain number of words.
Argument: Number of words to truncate after
For example:
{{ value|truncatewords:2 }}
If value
is "Joel is a slug"
, the output will be "Joel is ..."
.
Newlines within the string will be removed.
truncatewords_html
¶
Similar to truncatewords
, except that it is aware of HTML tags. Any
tags that are opened in the string and not closed before the truncation point,
are closed immediately after the truncation.
This is less efficient than truncatewords
, so should only be used
when it is being passed HTML text.
For example:
{{ value|truncatewords_html:2 }}
If value
is "<p>Joel is a slug</p>"
, the output will be
"<p>Joel is ...</p>"
.
Newlines in the HTML content will be preserved.
unordered_list
¶
Recursively takes a self-nested list and returns an HTML unordered list – WITHOUT opening and closing <ul> tags.
The list is assumed to be in the proper format. For example, if var
contains ['States', ['Kansas', ['Lawrence', 'Topeka'], 'Illinois']]
, then
{{ var|unordered_list }}
would return:
<li>States
<ul>
<li>Kansas
<ul>
<li>Lawrence</li>
<li>Topeka</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Illinois</li>
</ul>
</li>
upper
¶
Converts a string into all uppercase.
For example:
{{ value|upper }}
If value
is "Joel is a slug"
, the output will be "JOEL IS A SLUG"
.
urlencode
¶
Escapes a value for use in a URL.
For example:
{{ value|urlencode }}
If value
is "https://www.example.org/foo?a=b&c=d"
, the output will be
"https%3A//www.example.org/foo%3Fa%3Db%26c%3Dd"
.
An optional argument containing the characters which should not be escaped can be provided.
If not provided, the ‘/’ character is assumed safe. An empty string can be provided when all characters should be escaped. For example:
{{ value|urlencode:"" }}
If value
is "https://www.example.org/"
, the output will be
"https%3A%2F%2Fwww.example.org%2F"
.
urlize
¶
Converts URLs and email addresses in text into clickable links.
This template tag works on links prefixed with http://
, https://
, or
www.
. For example, https://goo.gl/aia1t
will get converted but
goo.gl/aia1t
won’t.
It also supports domain-only links ending in one of the original top level
domains (.com
, .edu
, .gov
, .int
, .mil
, .net
, and
.org
). For example, djangoproject.com
gets converted.
Links can have trailing punctuation (periods, commas, close-parens) and leading
punctuation (opening parens), and urlize
will still do the right thing.
Links generated by urlize
have a rel="nofollow"
attribute added
to them.
For example:
{{ value|urlize }}
If value
is "Check out www.djangoproject.com"
, the output will be
"Check out <a href="http://www.djangoproject.com"
rel="nofollow">www.djangoproject.com</a>"
.
In addition to web links, urlize
also converts email addresses into
mailto:
links. If value
is
"Send questions to foo@example.com"
, the output will be
"Send questions to <a href="mailto:foo@example.com">foo@example.com</a>"
.
The urlize
filter also takes an optional parameter autoescape
. If
autoescape
is True
, the link text and URLs will be escaped using
Django’s built-in escape
filter. The default value for
autoescape
is True
.
Note
If urlize
is applied to text that already contains HTML markup,
things won’t work as expected. Apply this filter only to plain text.
urlizetrunc
¶
Converts URLs and email addresses into clickable links just like urlize, but truncates URLs longer than the given character limit.
Argument: Number of characters that link text should be truncated to, including the ellipsis that’s added if truncation is necessary.
For example:
{{ value|urlizetrunc:15 }}
If value
is "Check out www.djangoproject.com"
, the output would be
'Check out <a href="http://www.djangoproject.com"
rel="nofollow">www.djangopr...</a>'
.
As with urlize, this filter should only be applied to plain text.
wordcount
¶
Returns the number of words.
For example:
{{ value|wordcount }}
If value
is "Joel is a slug"
, the output will be 4
.
wordwrap
¶
Wraps words at specified line length.
Argument: number of characters at which to wrap the text
For example:
{{ value|wordwrap:5 }}
If value
is Joel is a slug
, the output would be:
Joel
is a
slug
yesno
¶
Maps values for True
, False
, and (optionally) None
, to the strings
“yes”, “no”, “maybe”, or a custom mapping passed as a comma-separated list, and
returns one of those strings according to the value:
For example:
{{ value|yesno:"yeah,no,maybe" }}
Value | Argument | Outputs |
---|---|---|
True |
yes |
|
True |
"yeah,no,maybe" |
yeah |
False |
"yeah,no,maybe" |
no |
None |
"yeah,no,maybe" |
maybe |
None |
"yeah,no" |
no (converts None to False
if no mapping for None is given) |
Internationalization tags and filters¶
Django provides template tags and filters to control each aspect of internationalization in templates. They allow for granular control of translations, formatting, and time zone conversions.
i18n
¶
This library allows specifying translatable text in templates.
To enable it, set USE_I18N
to True
, then load it with
{% load i18n %}
.
l10n
¶
This library provides control over the localization of values in templates.
You only need to load the library using {% load l10n %}
, but you’ll often
set USE_L10N
to True
so that localization is active by default.
Other tags and filters libraries¶
Django comes with a couple of other template-tag libraries that you have to
enable explicitly in your INSTALLED_APPS
setting and enable in your
template with the {% load %}
tag.
django.contrib.humanize
¶
A set of Django template filters useful for adding a “human touch” to data. See django.contrib.humanize.
static
¶
static
¶
To link to static files that are saved in STATIC_ROOT
Django ships
with a static
template tag. If the django.contrib.staticfiles
app is installed, the tag will serve files using url()
method of the
storage specified by STATICFILES_STORAGE
. For example:
{% load static %}
<img src="{% static "images/hi.jpg" %}" alt="Hi!" />
It is also able to consume standard context variables, e.g. assuming a
user_stylesheet
variable is passed to the template:
{% load static %}
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{% static user_stylesheet %}" type="text/css" media="screen" />
If you’d like to retrieve a static URL without displaying it, you can use a slightly different call:
{% load static %}
{% static "images/hi.jpg" as myphoto %}
<img src="{{ myphoto }}"></img>
Using Jinja2 templates?
See Jinja2
for information on
using the static
tag with Jinja2.
In older versions, you had to use {% load static from staticfiles %}
in
your template to serve files from the storage defined in
STATICFILES_STORAGE
. This is no longer required.
get_static_prefix
¶
You should prefer the static
template tag, but if you need more control
over exactly where and how STATIC_URL
is injected into the template,
you can use the get_static_prefix
template tag:
{% load static %}
<img src="{% get_static_prefix %}images/hi.jpg" alt="Hi!" />
There’s also a second form you can use to avoid extra processing if you need the value multiple times:
{% load static %}
{% get_static_prefix as STATIC_PREFIX %}
<img src="{{ STATIC_PREFIX }}images/hi.jpg" alt="Hi!" />
<img src="{{ STATIC_PREFIX }}images/hi2.jpg" alt="Hello!" />
get_media_prefix
¶
Similar to the get_static_prefix
, get_media_prefix
populates a
template variable with the media prefix MEDIA_URL
, e.g.:
{% load static %}
<body data-media-url="{% get_media_prefix %}">
By storing the value in a data attribute, we ensure it’s escaped appropriately if we want to use it in a JavaScript context.