Skip to main content

A purely-functional HTML builder for Python. Think JSX rather than templates.

Project description

htbuilder — tiny HTML string builder for Python

htbuilder lets you build HTML strings using a purely functional syntax in Python. Why use templating languages when you can just use functions?

(PS: If you like this, check out jsbuild which lets you build JavaScript strings by simply annotating Python functions!)

Installation

Just PIP it!

pip install htbuilder

Usage

Just import tags like div with from htbuilder import div, then call them:

# Import any tag you want from htbuilder, and it just works!
# (This syntax requires Python 3.7+. See below for an alternate syntax)
from htbuilder import div

dom = div('Hello world!')

Then you can get the string output by calling str() on it:

str(dom)
# Returns '<div>Hello world!</div>'

...which means you can also just print() to see it in the terminal:

print(dom)
# Prints '<div>Hello world!</div>'

To specify attributes, call the tag builder with keyword args:

print(
  div(id='sidebar', foo='bar')
)
# Prints '<div id="sidebar" foo="bar"></div>'

To specify both attributes and children, first specify the attributes using keyword args, then pass the children afterwards inside a new set of parentheses:

print(
  div(id='sidebar', foo='bar')(
    "Hello world!"
  )
)
# Prints '<div id="sidebar" foo="bar">Hello world!</div>'

This is required because Python doesn't allow you to pass keyword arguments before you pass normal arguments.

Multiple children

Want to output multiple children? Just pass them all as arguments:

from htbuilder import div, ul, li, img

dom = (
  div(id='container')(
    ul(_class='greetings')(
      li('hello'),
      li('hi'),
      li('whattup'),
    )
  )
)

print(dom)

# Prints this (but without added spacing):
# <div id="container">
#   <ul class="greetings">
#     <li>hello</li>
#     <li>hi</li>
#     <li>whattup</li>
#   </ul>
# </div>

Programmatically add children

You can also pass any iterable to specify multiple children, which means you can simply use things like generator expressions for great awesome:

from htbuilder import div, ul, li, img

image_paths = [
  'http://myimages.com/foo1.jpg',
  'http://myimages.com/foo2.jpg',
  'http://myimages.com/foo3.jpg',
]

dom = (
  div(id='container')(
    ul(_class='image-list')(
      li(img(src=image_path, _class='large-image'))
      for image_path in image_paths
    )
  )
)

print(dom)
# Prints:
# <div id="container">
#   <ul class="image-list">
#     <li><img src="http://myimages.com/foo1.jpg" class="large-image"/></li>
#     <li><img src="http://myimages.com/foo2.jpg" class="large-image"/></li>
#     <li><img src="http://myimages.com/foo3.jpg" class="large-image"/></li>
#   </ul>
# </div>

Conditionally add elements

And because it's just Python, you can use an if/else expression to conditionally insert elements:

use_bold = True

dom = (
  div(
      b("bold text")
    if use_bold else
      "normal text"
  )
)

print(dom)
# Prints: <div><b>bold text</b></div>

Styling

We provide helpers to write styles without having to pass huge style strings as arguments. Instead, just use handy builders like styles(), classes(), fonts(), along with helpers you can import from the units and funcs modules.

# styles, classes, and fonts are special imports to help build attribute strings.
from htbuilder import div, styles, classes, fonts

# You can import anything from .units and .funcs to make it easier to specify
# units like "%" and "px", as well as functions like "rgba()" and "rgba()".
from htbuilder.units import percent, px
from htbuilder.funcs import rgba, rgb

bottom_margin = 10
is_big = True

dom = (
  div(
    _class=classes('btn', big=is_big)
    style=styles(
        color='black',
        font_family=fonts('Comic Sans', 'sans-serif'),
        margin=px(0, 0, bottom_margin, 0),
        padding=(px(10), percent(5))
        box_shadow=[
            (0, 0, px(10), rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1)),
            (0, 0, '2px', rgb(0, 0, 0)),
        ],
    )
  )
)

# Prints:
# <div
#   class="btn big"
#   style="
#     color: black;
#     font-family: "Comic Sans", "sans-serif";
#     margin: 0 0 10px 0;
#     padding: 10px 5%;
#     box-shadow: 0 0 10px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1), 0 0 2px rgb(0, 0, 0);
#   "></div>

Working with Python < 3.7

If using Python < 3.7, the import should look like this instead:

from htbuilder import H

div = H.div
ul = H.ul
li = H.li
img = H.img
# ...etc

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

htbuilder-0.3.0.tar.gz (7.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

File details

Details for the file htbuilder-0.3.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: htbuilder-0.3.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 7.2 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/3.2.0 pkginfo/1.5.0.1 requests/2.24.0 setuptools/46.0.0 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.48.0 CPython/3.8.2

File hashes

Hashes for htbuilder-0.3.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 d997f147586ccb5ffdcd44716429a5d91e835003b96e939ca4e1137cd25e7d50
MD5 e55cd09de58f01df07c2a3b61a79fc70
BLAKE2b-256 9f4d02981e59ece4e5c382e599d61310a2676d34de8a205e798389ae340ccd67

See more details on using hashes here.

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