mirror of https://gitee.com/openkylin/jinja2.git
227 lines
6.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
227 lines
6.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
Switching from other Template Engines
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=====================================
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.. highlight:: html+jinja
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If you have used a different template engine in the past and want to switch
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to Jinja here is a small guide that shows the basic syntactic and semantic
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changes between some common, similar text template engines for Python.
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Jinja 1
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-------
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Jinja 2 is mostly compatible with Jinja 1 in terms of API usage and template
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syntax. The differences between Jinja 1 and 2 are explained in the following
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list.
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API
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~~~
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Loaders
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Jinja 2 uses a different loader API. Because the internal representation
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of templates changed there is no longer support for external caching
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systems such as memcached. The memory consumed by templates is comparable
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with regular Python modules now and external caching doesn't give any
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advantage. If you have used a custom loader in the past have a look at
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the new :ref:`loader API <loaders>`.
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Loading templates from strings
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In the past it was possible to generate templates from a string with the
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default environment configuration by using `jinja.from_string`. Jinja 2
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provides a :class:`Template` class that can be used to do the same, but
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with optional additional configuration.
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Automatic unicode conversion
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Jinja 1 performed automatic conversion of bytes in a given encoding
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into unicode objects. This conversion is no longer implemented as it
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was inconsistent as most libraries are using the regular Python
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ASCII bytes to Unicode conversion. An application powered by Jinja 2
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*has to* use unicode internally everywhere or make sure that Jinja 2
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only gets unicode strings passed.
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i18n
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Jinja 1 used custom translators for internationalization. i18n is now
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available as Jinja 2 extension and uses a simpler, more gettext friendly
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interface and has support for babel. For more details see
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:ref:`i18n-extension`.
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Internal methods
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Jinja 1 exposed a few internal methods on the environment object such
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as `call_function`, `get_attribute` and others. While they were marked
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as being an internal method it was possible to override them. Jinja 2
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doesn't have equivalent methods.
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Sandbox
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Jinja 1 was running sandbox mode by default. Few applications actually
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used that feature so it became optional in Jinja 2. For more details
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about the sandboxed execution see :class:`SandboxedEnvironment`.
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Context
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Jinja 1 had a stacked context as storage for variables passed to the
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environment. In Jinja 2 a similar object exists but it doesn't allow
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modifications nor is it a singleton. As inheritance is dynamic now
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multiple context objects may exist during template evaluation.
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Filters and Tests
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Filters and tests are regular functions now. It's no longer necessary
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and allowed to use factory functions.
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Templates
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~~~~~~~~~
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Jinja 2 has mostly the same syntax as Jinja 1. What's different is that
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macros require parentheses around the argument list now.
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Additionally Jinja 2 allows dynamic inheritance now and dynamic includes.
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The old helper function `rendertemplate` is gone now, `include` can be used
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instead. Includes no longer import macros and variable assignments, for
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that the new `import` tag is used. This concept is explained in the
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:ref:`import` documentation.
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Another small change happened in the `for`-tag. The special loop variable
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doesn't have a `parent` attribute, instead you have to alias the loop
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yourself. See :ref:`accessing-the-parent-loop` for more details.
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Django
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------
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If you have previously worked with Django templates, you should find
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Jinja very familiar. In fact, most of the syntax elements look and
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work the same.
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However, Jinja provides some more syntax elements covered in the
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documentation and some work a bit different.
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This section covers the template changes. As the API is fundamentally
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different we won't cover it here.
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Method Calls
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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In Django method calls work implicitly, while Jinja requires the explicit
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Python syntax. Thus this Django code::
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{% for page in user.get_created_pages %}
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...
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{% endfor %}
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...looks like this in Jinja::
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{% for page in user.get_created_pages() %}
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...
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{% endfor %}
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This allows you to pass variables to the method, which is not possible in
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Django. This syntax is also used for macros.
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Filter Arguments
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Jinja provides more than one argument for filters. Also the syntax for
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argument passing is different. A template that looks like this in Django::
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{{ items|join:", " }}
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looks like this in Jinja::
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{{ items|join(', ') }}
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It is a bit more verbose, but it allows different types of arguments -
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including variables - and more than one of them.
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Tests
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~~~~~
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In addition to filters there also are tests you can perform using the is
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operator. Here are some examples::
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{% if user.user_id is odd %}
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{{ user.username|e }} is odd
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{% else %}
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hmm. {{ user.username|e }} looks pretty normal
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{% endif %}
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Loops
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~~~~~
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For loops work very similarly to Django, but notably the Jinja special
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variable for the loop context is called `loop`, not `forloop` as in Django.
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In addition, the Django `empty` argument is called `else` in Jinja. For
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example, the Django template::
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{% for item in items %}
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{{ item }}
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{% empty %}
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No items!
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{% endfor %}
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...looks like this in Jinja::
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{% for item in items %}
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{{ item }}
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{% else %}
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No items!
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{% endfor %}
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Cycle
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~~~~~
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The ``{% cycle %}`` tag does not exist in Jinja; however, you can achieve the
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same output by using the `cycle` method on the loop context special variable.
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The following Django template::
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{% for user in users %}
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<li class="{% cycle 'odd' 'even' %}">{{ user }}</li>
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{% endfor %}
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...looks like this in Jinja::
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{% for user in users %}
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<li class="{{ loop.cycle('odd', 'even') }}">{{ user }}</li>
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{% endfor %}
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There is no equivalent of ``{% cycle ... as variable %}``.
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Mako
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----
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.. highlight:: html+mako
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If you have used Mako so far and want to switch to Jinja you can configure
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Jinja to look more like Mako:
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.. sourcecode:: python
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env = Environment('<%', '%>', '${', '}', '<%doc>', '</%doc>', '%', '##')
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With an environment configured like that, Jinja should be able to interpret
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a small subset of Mako templates. Jinja does not support embedded Python
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code, so you would have to move that out of the template. The syntax for defs
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(which are called macros in Jinja) and template inheritance is different too.
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The following Mako template::
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<%inherit file="layout.html" />
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<%def name="title()">Page Title</%def>
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<ul>
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% for item in list:
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<li>${item}</li>
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% endfor
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</ul>
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Looks like this in Jinja with the above configuration::
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<% extends "layout.html" %>
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<% block title %>Page Title<% endblock %>
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<% block body %>
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<ul>
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% for item in list:
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<li>${item}</li>
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% endfor
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</ul>
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<% endblock %>
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