Fixed #21881 -- Clarify behavior of {% ssi %} template tag.

When using the `parsed` option, {% ssi %} has the same limitation
as {% include %}, namely that the rendering of the included
template is done separately.

Thanks to trac user nagyv for the report and to alextreme for
the patch.
This commit is contained in:
Baptiste Mispelon 2014-02-23 12:00:24 +01:00
parent 202bf69c2f
commit 072fb923e1
1 changed files with 8 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -957,7 +957,7 @@ current page::
The first parameter of ``ssi`` can be a quoted literal or any other context
variable.
If the optional "parsed" parameter is given, the contents of the included
If the optional ``parsed`` parameter is given, the contents of the included
file are evaluated as template code, within the current context::
{% ssi '/home/html/ljworld.com/includes/right_generic.html' parsed %}
@ -966,6 +966,13 @@ Note that if you use ``{% ssi %}``, you'll need to define
:setting:`ALLOWED_INCLUDE_ROOTS` in your Django settings, as a security
measure.
.. note::
With the :ttag:`ssi` tag and the ``parsed`` parameter
there is no shared state between files -- each include is a completely
independent rendering process. This means it's not possible for example to
define blocks or alter the context in the current page using the included
file.
See also: :ttag:`{% include %}<include>`.
.. templatetag:: templatetag