This module aims to make bringing Jinja templates to Sanic to be easy.
Project description
sanja
This module aims to make bringing Jinja templates to Sanic to be easy.
It is entirelly up to You
how You will configure your Jinja template environment.
Great freedom :-)
It consist of only two dozens lines of simple code.
Installation.
pip install sanja
First You have to configure Your Sanic app so it holds Jinja template environment instance.
app = sanic.Sanic("Some app")
sanja_conf_app(
app,
# There go normal parameters like for jijna2.Environment(),
# for example:
auto_reload=True,
loader=jinja2PrefixLoader({
'some_package': jinja_PackageLoader("some_package")}))
By default this Jinja template environment is held in:
app.config['JINJA_ENV']
so equaly well You could do:
app.config['JINJA_ENV'] = jinja2.Environment(
auto_reload=True,
loader=jinja2PrefixLoader({
'some_package': jinja_PackageLoader("some_package")}))
But if You wish to change it,
or have more then one Jinja template environment,
then just:
sanja_conf_app(
app,
jinja_template_env_name="JINJA_ENV_2",
...)
or:
app.config['JINJA_ENV_2'] = jinja2.Environment(
...)
Then You can just use Jinja rendering and Sanic response.
To do so simply decorate your request handler,
for example:
@app.route("/some/url")
@sanja.render("some_package/some_template.html.jinja", "html")
async def some_view(request):
...
return {'jijna': "context"}
- some_view function has to return jinja "context" instance.
- In first sanja.render() parameter provide jinja template.
(In this example it has to be under
some_package/templates/some_template.html.jinja
because it is how we configured here jinja template environment,
so having any isues please refer to Jinja documentation). - Second sanja.render() parameter coresponds to sanic.response "kind",
so if doubts plese refer to Sanic documentation.
Possible values are:- "text"
- "html"
- "json"
- "raw"
And if You want to use other Jinja template environment,
that You have configured before,
you can do so:
@app.route("/some/url2")
@sanja.render("some_package/some_template.html.jinja", "html", jinja_template_env_name="JINJA_ENV_2")
async def some_view(request):
...
return {'jijna': "context"}
Yo can also use it for Class-Based Views.
In decorators class variable:
class YourView(sanic.views.HTTPMethodView):
decorators = [sanja.render(...)]
...
or per http method:
class YourView(sanic.views.HTTPMethodView):
@sanja.render(...)
async def get(self, request):
...
...
NOTE for json format.
In order to return json format,
your template should be either hand crafted proper json, e.g:
{
"some": "thing"
}
or e.g whole template can be just one variable turned into json like:
{{some_variable|tojson}}
SENDING ADDITIONAL CONTEXT TO TEMPLATES.
Sending template context to template.
You may find usefull to have access to template context from within template.
To enable it for all templates (generated by particular jinja env),
just provide:
update_templates_with_its_context=True
to conf_app() function.
To enable it for particular generated template,
just provide:
update_template_with_its_context=True
to @render() decorator.
Then in template You can access all template context with:
{{get_template_context()}}
or ask for value for just some specific key:
{{get_template_contex("key")}}
(None is returned if key is not in template context).
Sending any extra context to template.
To send e.g.: x=5 to all templates (generated by particular jinja env),
just provide:
update_jinja_env_globals_with={'x': 5}
to conf_app() function.
To send e.g.: x=5 to particular generated template,
just provide:
update_template_globals_with={'x': 5}
to @render() decorator.
Then in template You can access it with:
{{x}}
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