Fixed #20962 -- Documented that template tag render() may raise exceptions.
Thanks Keryn Knight for the report.
This commit is contained in:
parent
54cd930baf
commit
e077224f4a
1
AUTHORS
1
AUTHORS
|
@ -277,6 +277,7 @@ answer newbie questions, and generally made Django that much better:
|
|||
Janos Guljas
|
||||
Thomas Güttler <hv@tbz-pariv.de>
|
||||
Horst Gutmann <zerok@zerokspot.com>
|
||||
Bouke Haarsma <bouke@haarsma.eu>
|
||||
Antti Haapala <antti@industrialwebandmagic.com>
|
||||
Scot Hacker <shacker@birdhouse.org>
|
||||
dAniel hAhler
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -478,8 +478,12 @@ Notes:
|
|||
|
||||
* The ``render()`` method is where the work actually happens.
|
||||
|
||||
* ``render()`` should never raise ``TemplateSyntaxError`` or any other
|
||||
exception. It should fail silently, just as template filters should.
|
||||
* ``render()`` should generally fail silently, particularly in a production
|
||||
environment where :setting:`DEBUG` and :setting:`TEMPLATE_DEBUG` are
|
||||
``False``. In some cases however, particularly if :setting:`TEMPLATE_DEBUG` is
|
||||
``True``, this method may raise an exception to make debugging easier. For
|
||||
example, several core tags raise ``django.template.TemplateSyntaxError``
|
||||
if they receive the wrong number or type of arguments.
|
||||
|
||||
Ultimately, this decoupling of compilation and rendering results in an
|
||||
efficient template system, because a template can render multiple contexts
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue