| Templates |
| ========= |
|
|
| Flask leverages Jinja2 as its template engine. You are obviously free to use |
| a different template engine, but you still have to install Jinja2 to run |
| Flask itself. This requirement is necessary to enable rich extensions. |
| An extension can depend on Jinja2 being present. |
|
|
| This section only gives a very quick introduction into how Jinja2 |
| is integrated into Flask. If you want information on the template |
| engine's syntax itself, head over to the official `Jinja2 Template |
| Documentation <https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/templates/>`_ for |
| more information. |
|
|
| Jinja Setup |
| ----------- |
|
|
| Unless customized, Jinja2 is configured by Flask as follows: |
|
|
| - autoescaping is enabled for all templates ending in ``.html``, |
| ``.htm``, ``.xml`` as well as ``.xhtml`` when using |
| :func:`~flask.templating.render_template`. |
| - autoescaping is enabled for all strings when using |
| :func:`~flask.templating.render_template_string`. |
| - a template has the ability to opt in/out autoescaping with the |
| ``{% autoescape %}`` tag. |
| - Flask inserts a couple of global functions and helpers into the |
| Jinja2 context, additionally to the values that are present by |
| default. |
|
|
| Standard Context |
| ---------------- |
|
|
| The following global variables are available within Jinja2 templates |
| by default: |
|
|
| .. data:: config |
| :noindex: |
|
|
| The current configuration object (:data:`flask.Flask.config`) |
|
|
| .. versionadded:: 0.6 |
|
|
| .. versionchanged:: 0.10 |
| This is now always available, even in imported templates. |
|
|
| .. data:: request |
| :noindex: |
|
|
| The current request object (:class:`flask.request`). This variable is |
| unavailable if the template was rendered without an active request |
| context. |
|
|
| .. data:: session |
| :noindex: |
|
|
| The current session object (:class:`flask.session`). This variable |
| is unavailable if the template was rendered without an active request |
| context. |
|
|
| .. data:: g |
| :noindex: |
|
|
| The request-bound object for global variables (:data:`flask.g`). This |
| variable is unavailable if the template was rendered without an active |
| request context. |
|
|
| .. function:: url_for |
| :noindex: |
|
|
| The :func:`flask.url_for` function. |
|
|
| .. function:: get_flashed_messages |
| :noindex: |
|
|
| The :func:`flask.get_flashed_messages` function. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: The Jinja Context Behavior |
|
|
| These variables are added to the context of variables, they are not |
| global variables. The difference is that by default these will not |
| show up in the context of imported templates. This is partially caused |
| by performance considerations, partially to keep things explicit. |
|
|
| What does this mean for you? If you have a macro you want to import, |
| that needs to access the request object you have two possibilities: |
|
|
| 1. you explicitly pass the request to the macro as parameter, or |
| the attribute of the request object you are interested in. |
| 2. you import the macro "with context". |
|
|
| Importing with context looks like this: |
|
|
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
|
|
| {% from '_helpers.html' import my_macro with context %} |
|
|
|
|
| Controlling Autoescaping |
| ------------------------ |
|
|
| Autoescaping is the concept of automatically escaping special characters |
| for you. Special characters in the sense of HTML (or XML, and thus XHTML) |
| are ``&``, ``>``, ``<``, ``"`` as well as ``'``. Because these characters |
| carry specific meanings in documents on their own you have to replace them |
| by so called "entities" if you want to use them for text. Not doing so |
| would not only cause user frustration by the inability to use these |
| characters in text, but can also lead to security problems. (see |
| :ref:`security-xss`) |
| |
| Sometimes however you will need to disable autoescaping in templates. |
| This can be the case if you want to explicitly inject HTML into pages, for |
| example if they come from a system that generates secure HTML like a |
| markdown to HTML converter. |
|
|
| There are three ways to accomplish that: |
|
|
| - In the Python code, wrap the HTML string in a :class:`~flask.Markup` |
| object before passing it to the template. This is in general the |
| recommended way. |
| - Inside the template, use the ``|safe`` filter to explicitly mark a |
| string as safe HTML (``{{ myvariable|safe }}``) |
| - Temporarily disable the autoescape system altogether. |
|
|
| To disable the autoescape system in templates, you can use the ``{% |
| autoescape %}`` block: |
|
|
| .. sourcecode:: html+jinja |
|
|
| {% autoescape false %} |
| <p>autoescaping is disabled here |
| <p>{{ will_not_be_escaped }} |
| {% endautoescape %} |
|
|
| Whenever you do this, please be very cautious about the variables you are |
| using in this block. |
|
|
| .. _registering-filters: |
|
|
| Registering Filters |
| ------------------- |
|
|
| If you want to register your own filters in Jinja2 you have two ways to do |
| that. You can either put them by hand into the |
| :attr:`~flask.Flask.jinja_env` of the application or use the |
| :meth:`~flask.Flask.template_filter` decorator. |
|
|
| The two following examples work the same and both reverse an object:: |
| |
| @app.template_filter('reverse') |
| def reverse_filter(s): |
| return s[::-1] |
|
|
| def reverse_filter(s): |
| return s[::-1] |
| app.jinja_env.filters['reverse'] = reverse_filter |
|
|
| In case of the decorator the argument is optional if you want to use the |
| function name as name of the filter. Once registered, you can use the filter |
| in your templates in the same way as Jinja2's builtin filters, for example if |
| you have a Python list in context called `mylist`:: |
| |
| {% for x in mylist | reverse %} |
| {% endfor %} |
|
|
|
|
| Context Processors |
| ------------------ |
|
|
| To inject new variables automatically into the context of a template, |
| context processors exist in Flask. Context processors run before the |
| template is rendered and have the ability to inject new values into the |
| template context. A context processor is a function that returns a |
| dictionary. The keys and values of this dictionary are then merged with |
| the template context, for all templates in the app:: |
| |
| @app.context_processor |
| def inject_user(): |
| return dict(user=g.user) |
|
|
| The context processor above makes a variable called `user` available in |
| the template with the value of `g.user`. This example is not very |
| interesting because `g` is available in templates anyways, but it gives an |
| idea how this works. |
|
|
| Variables are not limited to values; a context processor can also make |
| functions available to templates (since Python allows passing around |
| functions):: |
| |
| @app.context_processor |
| def utility_processor(): |
| def format_price(amount, currency="€"): |
| return f"{amount:.2f}{currency}" |
| return dict(format_price=format_price) |
|
|
| The context processor above makes the `format_price` function available to all |
| templates:: |
| |
| {{ format_price(0.33) }} |
|
|
| You could also build `format_price` as a template filter (see |
| :ref:`registering-filters`), but this demonstrates how to pass functions in a |
| context processor. |
|
|