Fixed #2655 -- added documentation about resolve_variable() for custom template
tags. Thanks dave@thebarproject.com. git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@4477 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
This commit is contained in:
parent
007f17d63e
commit
fefcbbfe37
1
AUTHORS
1
AUTHORS
|
@ -66,6 +66,7 @@ answer newbie questions, and generally made Django that much better:
|
|||
Matt Croydon <http://www.postneo.com/>
|
||||
dackze+django@gmail.com
|
||||
Jonathan Daugherty (cygnus) <http://www.cprogrammer.org/>
|
||||
dave@thebarproject.com
|
||||
Jason Davies (Esaj) <http://www.jasondavies.com/>
|
||||
Alex Dedul
|
||||
deric@monowerks.com
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -801,6 +801,70 @@ Python 2.4 and above::
|
|||
If you leave off the ``name`` argument, as in the second example above, Django
|
||||
will use the function's name as the tag name.
|
||||
|
||||
Passing template variables to the tag
|
||||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||||
|
||||
Although you can pass any number of arguments to a template tag using
|
||||
``token.split_contents()``, the arguments are all unpacked as
|
||||
string literals. A little more work is required in order to dynamic content (a
|
||||
template variable) to a template tag as an argument.
|
||||
|
||||
While the previous examples have formatted the current time into a string and
|
||||
returned the string, suppose you wanted to pass in a ``DateTimeField`` from an
|
||||
object and have the template tag format that date-time::
|
||||
|
||||
<p>This post was last updated at {% format_time blog_entry.date_updated "%Y-%m-%d %I:%M %p" %}.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
Initially, ``token.split_contents()`` will return three values:
|
||||
|
||||
1. The tag name ``format_time``.
|
||||
2. The string "blog_entry.date_updated" (without the surrounding quotes).
|
||||
3. The formatting string "%Y-%m-%d %I:%M %p". The return value from
|
||||
``split_contents()`` will include the leading and trailing quotes for
|
||||
string literals like this.
|
||||
|
||||
Now your tag should begin to look like this::
|
||||
|
||||
from django import template
|
||||
def do_format_time(parser, token):
|
||||
try:
|
||||
# split_contents() knows not to split quoted strings.
|
||||
tag_name, date_to_format, format_string = token.split_contents()
|
||||
except ValueError:
|
||||
raise template.TemplateSyntaxError, "%r tag requires exactly two arguments" % token.contents[0]
|
||||
if not (format_string[0] == format_string[-1] and format_string[0] in ('"', "'")):
|
||||
raise template.TemplateSyntaxError, "%r tag's argument should be in quotes" % tag_name
|
||||
return FormatTimeNode(date_to_format, format_string[1:-1])
|
||||
|
||||
You also have to change the renderer to retrieve the actual contents of the
|
||||
``date_updated`` property of the ``blog_entry`` object. This can be
|
||||
accomplished by using the ``resolve_variable()`` function in
|
||||
``django.template``. You pass ``resolve_variable()`` the variable name and the
|
||||
current context, available in the ``render`` method::
|
||||
|
||||
from django import template
|
||||
from django.template import resolve_variable
|
||||
import datetime
|
||||
class FormatTimeNode(template.Node):
|
||||
def __init__(self, date_to_format, format_string):
|
||||
self.date_to_format = date_to_format
|
||||
self.format_string = format_string
|
||||
|
||||
def render(self, context):
|
||||
try:
|
||||
actual_date = resolve_variable(self.date_to_format, context)
|
||||
return actual_date.strftime(self.format_string)
|
||||
except VariableDoesNotExist:
|
||||
return ''
|
||||
|
||||
``resolve_variable`` will try to resolve ``blog_entry.date_updated`` and then
|
||||
format it accordingly.
|
||||
|
||||
.. note::
|
||||
The ``resolve_variable()`` function will throw a ``VariableDoesNotExist``
|
||||
exception if it cannot resolve the string passed to it in the current
|
||||
context of the page.
|
||||
|
||||
Shortcut for simple tags
|
||||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||||
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue