Skip to main content

An attempt to bring namespaces and more control to Django's {% load %} tag.

Project description

An attempt to bring namespaces and more control to Django’s {% load %} tag.

This project includes two tags: {% import %} and a replacement for the built-in {% load %}. Both provide a similar feature set. The primary difference is that {% import %} namespaces by default, where {% load %} does not, retaining backwards compatibility with Django’s built-in {% load %} tag.

installation

To install, first install the package to your system using either of the following:

pip install django-smart-load-tag
easy_install django-smart-load-tag

Then you must install into your Django project by adding “smart_load_tag” to your settings.INSTALLED_APPS.

If you want to use django-smart-load-tag without loading it into every template, you can install it globally by adding it to your builtin tags. Just add the following to your urlconf (usually urls.py):

from django.template import add_to_builtins
add_to_builtins('smart_load_tag.templatetags.smart_load')

introduction

After loading, the smart {% load %} tag replaces the existing load tag, as it is backwards-compatible. It provides features that the existing load tag lacks:

templatetag namespaces:

{% load my_tags into cool_tags %}    # Load library ``my_tags`` into namespace ``cool_tags``.
{% cool_tags.my_tag %}               # Usage of tag ``my_tag`` imported above as part of the template library ``my_tags``.

load only a single tag from a library:

{% load lib.tag_name %}    # Load tag ``tag_name`` from templatetag library ``lib``.
{% tag_name %}             # Usage of tag imported above.

load library from a specific application:

{% load lib from my_app %}    # Ensure that library is loaded from my_app (by default, this will load the last library of that name in all your INSTALLED_APPS).

load tag as different name

{% load my_tags.foo_tag as my_foo_tag %}    # Load tag ``foo_tag`` from library ``my_tags`` and assign to name ``my_foo_tag``
{% my_foo_tag %}                            # Usage of tag imported above.

Thus, the syntax for the tag is described by this psuedo-regex:

{% load (lib_name(.tag_name)?( from app)?( as name)?( into namespace)?,? )+ %}

examples

Any combination of from, as, and into clauses are acceptable:

{% load foo_tags.my_tag from my_app into cool_tags as my_cool_tag %}    # lib foo_tags, tag my_tag, app my_app, namespace cool_tags, name my_cool_tag
{% cool_tags.my_cool_tag %}                                             # Usage

Note that the combination of into and as are not needed, as the following two lines are equivalent:

{% load foo_tags.my_tag into cool_tags as my_cool_tag %}
{% load foo_tags.my_tag as cool_tags.my_cool_tag %}

Multiple loads can be on the same line, optionally comma separated, enabling more complex combinations such as this:

{% load foo_tags from app1 into app1_foo_tags, foo_tags from app2, bar_tags.render_content as render_bar_content %}
{% app1_foo_tags.render_content %}    # from ``foo_tags from app1 into app1_foo_tags``
{% render_content %}                  # from ``foo_tags from app2``
{% render_bar_content %}              # from ``bar_tags.render_content as render_bar_content``

The functionality provided by django-smart-load-tag is a progressive enhancement, and can be safely loaded into any template, as it remains backwards-compatible with Django’s built-in {% load %} tag.

alternative syntax

The {% load %} replacement is intended to be backwards compatible, but a new tag also exists, {% import %} that provides a syntax that defaults to providing a namespace, while allowing you to opt-out of namespacing the loaded tags (using * from).

The following table illustrates the differences in syntax from the smart {% load %} tag.

{% import %} syntax

{% load %} syntax

{% import foo_tags %}

{% load foo_tags into foo_tags %}

{% import foo_tags from app1 %}

{% load foo_tags from app1 into foo_tags %}

{% import foo_tags.my_tag %}

{% load foo_tags.my_tag as foo_tags.my_tag %}

{% import foo_tags from my_app as my_foo %}

{% load foo_tags from my_app into my_foo %}

{% import foo_tags.my_tag as my_foo_tag %}

{% load foo_tags.my_tag as my_foo_tag %}

{% import * from foo_tags %}

{% load foo_tags %}

{% import * from foo_tags from app1 %}

{% load foo_tags from app1 %}

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

django-smart-load-tag-0.3.1.tar.gz (7.4 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Source

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page