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Django includecontents component-like tag

Project description

Django IncludeContents tag

Provides a component-like {% includecontents %} tag to Django.

For example:

{% load includecontents %}
{% includecontents "hello.html" %}
    <p>World</p>
{% endincludecontents %}

It also provides a simple Django template engine that extends this tag to work like an HTML component.

In this example, it will read include a components/card.html template:

<dj:card title="Hello">
  <p>World</p>
</dj:card>

Installation

pip install django-includecontents

To use the custom template engine, replace the default DjangoTemplates backend in your settings:

TEMPLATES = [
    {
        'BACKEND': 'includecontents.backends.Templates',
        ...
    },
]

This engine also adds includecontents to the built-in tags so there is no need to load it.

If you don't want the custom engine, just add this app to your INSTALLED_APPS and load the tag in your templates:

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    ...
    'includecontents',
]
{% load includecontents %}

...

{% includecontents %}...{% endincludecontents %}

Template tag usage

The includecontents tag works like the include tag but the contents is rendered and passed to the included template as a contents variable.

{% includecontents "hello.html" %}
    <p>World</p>
{% endincludecontents %}

Named contents blocks

You can also have named contents blocks within the component content.

For example:

{% includecontents "hello.html" %}
    <p>World</p>
    {% contents footer %}Footer{% endcontents %}
{% endincludecontents %}

Where hello.html template could look something like:

<div class="card">
  <div class="content">
    {{ contents }}
  </div>
  {% if contents.footer %}
  <div class="footer">
    {{ contents.footer }}
  </div>
  {% endif %}
</div>

HTML Components Usage

Create a components directory in your templates directory. This is where you will put your component templates that are used via the HTML component format. These components are normal Django templates that will be rendered with an isolated context. The context is passed to the component via component's attributes.

Components must be CamelCase and not match any standard HTML tags.

For example, a components/card.html template could look like:

<div class="card">
  <h2>{{ title }}</h2>
  <div class="content">
    {{ contents }}
  </div>
</div>

Which will allow you to use it like this (without the need to load any template library):

<dj:card title="Hello">
  <p>World</p>
</dj:card>

You can use named {% contents %} blocks, just like with the includecontents tag.

Attrs

You can define which attributes should be passed to the component in a comment at the top of the component template, and others that can have a default value.

Any other attributes passed to the component will be added to an attrs context variable that can render them as HTML attributes. You can also provide default values for these attributes via the default_attrs filter.

{# def title, large=False #}
<div {{ attrs|default_attrs:'class="card"' }}>

This would require a title attribute and allow an optional large attribute. Any other attributes will be rendered on the div, with a default class of card if you don't specify any other class. So the following tags would all be valid:

<dj:card title="Hello"></dj:card>
<dj:card title="Hello" large></dj:card>
<dj:card title="Hello" id="topcard" class="my-card"></dj:card>

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