I have listing field in all my classes to allow admins check or uncheck if they'd like item to be listed as below:
listing = models.BooleanField(default=True)
My challenge is in template. Im using a if and else statement to achieve this by
{% if listing %}
show them all
{% endif %}
and this is my view
def AllMovies (request):
movies= Movie.objects.all().order_by('movie_name')
context = {'movies': movies}
return render_to_response('allmovies.html', context, context_instance= RequestContext(request))
But django doesnt show anything despite listing is checked in my admin panel
Im sure im doing something wrong here as this is my first time working with templates. Could you guys please help me to understand what is the best approach here?
Thank you
You need to pass listing to the template, else it doesn't know what it is. I'm guessing you want something like this:
view:
context = {'user': request.user}
template:
{% if user.listing %}
show them all...
{% endif %}
p.s.
I kinda guessed that listing is something you assigned to the users, though your description was a bit confusing, so y'know... if I'm wrong just apply it for the right object. if it's a field that each movies has then it would probably be something like this:
{% for movie in movies %}
{% if movie.listing %}
{{ movie }}
{% endif %}
{% endfor %}
Related
I'm doing some pagination in Django. I want to show the pages' number which are ahead of the current page. I am using the following code:
{% for page in blogs_page.paginator.page_range|slice:"0:{{ blogs_page.number }}" %}
But this seems useless; the result does the same as the following:
{% for page in blogs_page.paginator.page_range %}
The slice does not work here. How do I fix this?
Never use {{ }} inside of {% %}, don't do this {% {{ }} %}.
{% for page in blogs_page.paginator.page_range|slice:"0:blogs_page.number" %}
I think it won't work. If I were you I would create a custom tag and executed all the logic there. So, it will look like this:
Template:
{% custom_tag blogs_page as result %}
{% for page in result %}
templatetags/tags.py:
from django import template
register = template.Library()
#register.simple_tag
def custom_tag(bl_page):
return bl.page.paginator.page_range[0:bl_page.number]
Details: custom tags
I want to loop data taken from database in rendered template. Using cms plugin.
I dont have problem looping data in html template. But if i use CMSPlugin to insert new app in placeholder, nothing shows.
If i run url localhost:port/test.html.I got input what i want. But rendered template doesnt loop data.
{% for post in posts %}
{{ post.firstoption }}
{% endfor %}
if I use code below, nothing shows in my rendered template. Values are passed in rendered template. Because, if i try {{instance.firstoption}} i get value shown in template. Problem is i cant loop data with tag instance.
{% for post in instance.posts %}
{{ post.firstoption }}
{% endfor %}
I also tried {% for post in instance.posts_set.all %}
and {% for post in instance.posts.all %}
cms_plugins.py
class pricing(CMSPluginBase):
model = mymodel
name = _("myplugin")
render_template = "template.html"
cache = False
def render(self, context, instance, placeholder):
context.update({'instance': instance})
return context
models.py
class mymodel(CMSPlugin):
firstoption = models.CharField(max_length=200)
def __str__(self):
return self.firstoption
It is probably because you need to call all on your posts
{% for post in instance.posts.all %}
{{ post.firstoption }}
{% endfor }
OK, so again there is likely a "simple" solution to this, but I am a beginner and nothing seems simple to me.
I have a view and a template that shows the attributes of an instance of a Car class that I have modeled. This Car class has a ManyToMany relationship with my custom User class. The template that show the attributes of a given instance of Car has many variables. The view for each Car works fine. Here is what I can't get to work:
I have a user profile page for each instance of User. From that page, I want to show the attributes of each Car that a particular User has "favorited." I am unable to figure out how to do this.
I have tried the {% include %} tag to include a snippet of the Car template and then use a for statement to iterate through the favorite set of the User. In theory, this would populate the User page with each Car that they have "favorited" and show its attributes. However, I do not know how to pass the {% include %} tag the proper context so the attributes are populated correctly for each instance of Car. Is this possible?
Is there a simpler way to do it that I am just overlooking?
Any help is appreciated. Thanks!
Use the {% include ... with ... %} syntax:
{% for car in user.favorite_cars.all %}
{% include "car.html" with name=car.name year=car.year %}
{% endfor %}
Another alternative is the {% with %} tag:
{% for car in user.favorite_cars.all %}
{% with name=car.name year=car.year %}
{% with color=car.color %}
{% include "car.html" %}
{% endwith %}
{% endwith %}
{% endfor %}
UPDATE: If data for the template can't be obtained from the Car model then you have to use the custom inclusion tag:
from django import template
register = template.Library()
#register.inclusion_tag('car.html')
def show_car(car):
history = get_history_for_car(car)
return {'name': car.name, 'history': history}
And the in the template:
{% load my_car_tags %}
{% for car in user.favorite_cars.all %}
{% show_car car %}
{% endfor %}
I'm trying to build a website that has products and categories.
When you are on the page of a product, you can click a button to see a list of all the categories it falls under.
You can click another button, that appears on all pages, to see a list of all the categories overall.
In the html page see_all_categories, I wrote a simple block like this:
{% extends 'base.html' %}
{% load staticfiles %}
{% block content%}
{{Category.all}}
{% endblock content %}
I expect to see a messy printout of all the categories but I don't. It doesn't return an error, but it produces nothing, other than the base.html.
What am I doing wrong?
You want to display a list of the categories. I assume your Category model owns an attribute named "title" which is the representation of your Category.
If you're using Django template engine or Jinja2, you can make a for loop inside your template like this :
{% for cat in Category.objects.all %}
{{ cat.title }}
{% endfor %}
As a troubleshooting, I'd suggest you didn't pass your Category model to your template, that is not done automatically. You have to add your model to the context before rendering the template.
As mentionned in the comments, here is doc for template rendering with Django templates.
Django Template Guide
To add your model to the context you can follow this guide.
I don't intend to help you further because I lack of information and that may vary a LOT according to your settings. (Class Based views ? Function based views ? What kind of template are you using... And so on)
I figured out the solution after many long annoying hours of trying everything. I feel dumb but I want to spare the next guy the massive pain in the two-pack.
This is what I did:
In the Views.py, I changed the view function for this page FROM this:
def view_all_categories(request):
context = {'Category' : Category}
return render(request, 'store/see_all_categories.html', context)
TO this
def view_all_categories(request):
all_cats = Category.objects.all().order_by('id')
context = {'all_categories' : all_cats}
return render(request, 'store/see_all_categories.html', context)
and in the page see_all_categories.html itself, I changed it (from the question) TO this:
{% extends 'base.html' %}
{% load staticfiles %}
{% block content%}
{% for cat in all_categories %}
<p>{{ cat.name }}</p>
{% endfor %}
{% endblock content %}
And now it works!!
I am hitting a brick wall when it comes to solving this problem. I have a template that is being included in an other template, but I am unable to render any template variables in the included template. I have a separate template tag file for the included template. I am at a total loss right now how to resolve this problem.
I would like to be able to render the field values from my model in the template (which consist of an image, a short description, etc.) I am fairly certain that I am going about this in the wrong way.
Below is my code:
The model:
class AddOnItem(models.Model):
base_product = models.ForeignKey(Product)
base_price = models.DecimalField(max_digits=8, decimal_places=2, default=0.0)
addon_image = models.ImageField(upload_to='uploads/shop/product/images/',
default='uploads/shop/product/images/', help_text='Max width: 450px')
short_description = models.CharField(max_length=255, blank=True)
def __unicode__(self):
return self.base_product.name
The template:
{% load addon_tags %}
{% if items_to_add %}
{% for items in items_to_add %}
<div id="addon-container">
<div id="left-addon" class="addon-container">
<img src="#" class="addon-image">
<p class="addon-description">{{items.short_description}}</p>
</div>
</div>
{% endfor %}
{% endif %}
addon_tags.py:
from django import template
from sho.models import AddOnItem
register = template.Library()
#register.inclusion_tag("foo/templates/v/sho/addon.html", takes_context=True)
def add_on_render():
context['items_to_add'] = AddOnItem()
return context
I imagine I am doing either a lot wrong (my assumption at the moment) or I am missing some minor bit. I have been working on this for several days and have gone over the docs repeatedly. I am simply completely missing something and this has become a major blocker for me. Any help would be appreciated.
Django version 1.4
Edit:
I ended up rewriting the view and did away with the templatetag. Thanks to both Daniel Roseman and Odif Yltsaeb for their replies.
1) From your post you are adding empty, new item into the context in add_on_render templateag.
2) I cant see in your post, WHERE you are using {% add_on_render %} templatetag. You have created templattag, but do not seem to be using it anywhere.
It is bit hard to understand what exactly are you trying to do or why you even need templatetag there.
If you want to display models field value, you do not need templateag for this and all the stuff that you show in your "template" part of this post, could be very well in your main template, which i assume, is not shown in your post.
If you want to use templatetag, then this templatetag should probably recieve AddOnItem istance as parameter like this:
#register.inclusion_tag("foo/templates/v/sho/addon.html", takes_context=True)
def add_on_render(item):
context['items_to_add'] = item
return context
And You could use it in some template like this:
{% load addon_tags %}
{% if items_to_add %}
{% for items in items_to_add %}
<div id="addon-container">
<div id="left-addon" class="addon-container">
<img src="#" class="addon-image">
<p class="addon-description">{% add_on_render items %}</p>
</div>
</div>
{% endfor %}
{% endif %}
and your foo/templates/v/sho/addon.html
would like like this:
{{ items_to_add.short_description }}
But doing it this way seems very unnecessary as you could achieve all that without templatag by using the template code that you already have outside your "main" template.
You haven't posted the template that you are attempting to include the tag in. I suspect you're not calling it at all, because there are a couple of errors that would cause exceptions if you did try and use the tag. You need to do {% add_on_render %} somewhere in your main template.
As I say though there are a couple of errors. Firstly, you don't define context (as an empty dict) before adding the items_to_add key. You can shortcut this by just doing it in one go.
Secondly you've made items_to_add a single, blank, AddOnItem. So in your included template, iterating through items_to_add does nothing at all. Not sure what you are trying to do there. Perhaps you want to pass all AddOnItem instances?
context = {'items_to_add': AddOnItem.objects.all()}
Or maybe you want to filter them by some criteria, in which case you probably want to pass those criteria to the inclusion tag itself:
def add_on_render(product):
context = {'items_to_add': AddOnItem.objects.filter(base_product=product)}
and you would call it from the main template like this:
{% add_on_render my_product %}
if you set "takes_context=True" you should take context as the first argument in decorated function:
#register.inclusion_tag("foo/templates/v/sho/addon.html", takes_context=True)
def add_on_render(context):
context['items_to_add'] = AddOnItem()
....