API === .. module:: jinja2 :synopsis: public Jinja2 API This document describes the API to Jinja2 and not the template language. It will be most useful as reference to those implementing the template interface to the application and not those who are creating Jinja2 templates. Basics ------ Jinja2 uses a central object called the template :class:`Environment`. Instances of this class are used to store the configuration, global objects and are used to load templates from the file system or other locations. Even if you are creating templates from string by using the constructor of :class:`Template` class, an environment is created automatically for you. Most applications will create one :class:`Environment` object on application initialization and use that to load templates. In some cases it's however useful to have multiple environments side by side, if different configurations are in use. The simplest way to configure Jinja2 to load templates for your application looks roughly like this:: from jinja2 import Environment, PackageLoader env = Environment(loader=PackageLoader('yourapplication', 'templates')) This will create a template environment with the default settings and a loader that looks up the templates in the `templates` folder inside the `yourapplication` python package. Different loaders are available and you can also write your own if you want to load templates from a database or other resources. To load a template from this environment you just have to call the :meth:`get_template` method which then returns the loaded :class:`Template`:: template = env.get_template('mytemplate.html') To render it with some variables, just call the :meth:`render` method:: print template.render(the='variables', go='here') High Level API -------------- .. autoclass:: jinja2.environment.Environment([options]) :members: from_string, get_template, join_path, parse, lex, extend .. attribute:: shared If a template was created by using the :class:`Template` constructor an environment is created automatically. These environments are created as shared environments which means that multiple templates may have the same anonymous environment. For all shared environments this attribute is `True`, else `False`. .. attribute:: sandboxed If the environment is sandboxed this attribute is `True`. For the sandbox mode have a look at the documentation for the :class:`~jinja2.sandbox.SandboxedEnvironment`. .. attribute:: filters A dict of filters for this environment. As long as no template was loaded it's safe to add new filters or remove old. For custom filters see :ref:`writing-filters`. For valid filter names have a look at :ref:`identifier-naming`. .. attribute:: tests A dict of test functions for this environment. As long as no template was loaded it's safe to modify this dict. For custom tests see :ref:`writing-tests`. For valid test names have a look at :ref:`identifier-naming`. .. attribute:: globals A dict of global variables. These variables are always available in a template. As long as no template was loaded it's safe to modify this dict. For more details see :ref:`global-namespace`. For valid object names have a look at :ref:`identifier-naming`. .. automethod:: overlay([options]) .. autoclass:: jinja2.Template :members: make_module, module, new_context .. attribute:: globals The dict with the globals of that template. It's unsafe to modify this dict as it may be shared with other templates or the environment that loaded the template. .. attribute:: name The loading name of the template. If the template was loaded from a string this is `None`. .. automethod:: render([context]) .. automethod:: generate([context]) .. automethod:: stream([context]) .. autoclass:: jinja2.environment.TemplateStream :members: disable_buffering, enable_buffering .. _identifier-naming: Notes on Identifiers ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Jinja2 uses the regular Python 2.x naming rules. Valid identifiers have to match ``[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*``. As a matter of fact non ASCII characters are currently not allowed. This limitation will probably go away as soon as unicode identifiers are fully specified for Python 3. Filters and tests are looked up in separate namespaces and have slightly modified identifier syntax. Filters and tests may contain dots to group filters and tests by topic. For example it's perfectly valid to add a function into the filter dict and call it `to.unicode`. The regular expression for filter and test identifiers is ``[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*(\.[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*)*```. Undefined Types --------------- These classes can be used as undefined types. The :class:`Environment` constructor takes an `undefined` parameter that can be one of those classes or a custom subclass of :class:`Undefined`. Whenever the template engine is unable to look up a name or access an attribute one of those objects is created and returned. Some operations on undefined values are then allowed, others fail. The closest to regular Python behavior is the `StrictUndefined` which disallows all operations beside testing if it's an undefined object. .. autoclass:: jinja2.runtime.Undefined .. autoclass:: jinja2.runtime.DebugUndefined .. autoclass:: jinja2.runtime.StrictUndefined The Context ----------- .. autoclass:: jinja2.runtime.Context :members: resolve, get_exported, get_all .. attribute:: parent A dict of read only, global variables the template looks up. These can either come from another :class:`Context`, from the :attr:`Environment.globals` or :attr:`Template.globals`. It must not be altered. .. attribute:: vars The template local variables. This list contains environment and context functions from the :attr:`parent` scope as well as local modifications and exported variables from the template. The template will modify this dict during template evaluation but filters and context functions are not allowed to modify it. .. attribute:: environment The environment that loaded the template. .. attribute:: exported_vars This set contains all the names the template exports. The values for the names are in the :attr:`vars` dict. In order to get a copy of the exported variables as dict, :meth:`get_exported` can be used. .. attribute:: name The load name of the template owning this context. .. attribute:: blocks A dict with the current mapping of blocks in the template. The keys in this dict are the names of the blocks, and the values a list of blocks registered. The last item in each list is the current active block (latest in the inheritance chain). .. _loaders: Loaders ------- Loaders are responsible for loading templates from a resource such as the file system. The environment will keep the compiled modules in memory like Python's `sys.modules`. Unlike `sys.modules` however this cache is limited in size by default and templates are automatically reloaded. All loaders are subclasses of :class:`BaseLoader`. If you want to create your own loader, subclass :class:`BaseLoader` and override `get_source`. .. autoclass:: jinja2.loaders.BaseLoader :members: get_source, load Here a list of the builtin loaders Jinja2 provides: .. autoclass:: jinja2.loaders.FileSystemLoader .. autoclass:: jinja2.loaders.PackageLoader .. autoclass:: jinja2.loaders.DictLoader .. autoclass:: jinja2.loaders.FunctionLoader .. autoclass:: jinja2.loaders.PrefixLoader .. autoclass:: jinja2.loaders.ChoiceLoader Utilities --------- These helper functions and classes are useful if you add custom filters or functions to a Jinja2 environment. .. autofunction:: jinja2.filters.environmentfilter .. autofunction:: jinja2.filters.contextfilter .. autofunction:: jinja2.utils.environmentfunction .. autofunction:: jinja2.utils.contextfunction .. function:: escape(s) Convert the characters &, <, >, and " in string s to HTML-safe sequences. Use this if you need to display text that might contain such characters in HTML. This function will not escaped objects that do have an HTML representation such as already escaped data. .. autofunction:: jinja2.utils.clear_caches .. autoclass:: jinja2.utils.Markup Exceptions ---------- .. autoexception:: jinja2.exceptions.TemplateError .. autoexception:: jinja2.exceptions.UndefinedError .. autoexception:: jinja2.exceptions.TemplateNotFound .. autoexception:: jinja2.exceptions.TemplateSyntaxError .. autoexception:: jinja2.exceptions.TemplateAssertionError .. _writing-filters: Custom Filters -------------- Custom filters are just regular Python functions that take the left side of the filter as first argument and the the arguments passed to the filter as extra arguments or keyword arguments. For example in the filter ``{{ 42|myfilter(23) }}`` the function would be called with ``myfilter(42, 23)``. Here for example a simple filter that can be applied to datetime objects to format them:: def datetimeformat(value, format='%H:%M / %d-%m-%Y'): return value.strftime(format) You can register it on the template environment by updating the :attr:`~Environment.filters` dict on the environment:: environment.filters['datetimeformat'] = datetimeformat Inside the template it can then be used as follows: .. sourcecode:: jinja written on: {{ article.pub_date|datetimeformat }} publication date: {{ article.pub_date|datetimeformat('%d-%m-%Y') }} Filters can also be passed the current template context or environment. This is useful if a filters wants to return an undefined value or check the current :attr:`~Environment.autoescape` setting. For this purpose two decorators exist: :func:`environmentfilter` and :func:`contextfilter`. Here a small example filter that breaks a text into HTML line breaks and paragraphs and marks the return value as safe HTML string if autoescaping is enabled:: import re from jinja2 import environmentfilter, Markup, escape _paragraph_re = re.compile(r'(?:\r\n|\r|\n){2,}') @environmentfilter def nl2br(environment, value): result = u'\n\n'.join(u'

%s

' % p.replace('\n', '
\n') for p in _paragraph_re.split(escape(value))) if environment.autoescape: result = Markup(result) return result Context filters work the same just that the first argument is the current active :class:`Context` rather then the environment. .. _writing-tests: Custom Tests ------------ Tests work like filters just that there is no way for a filter to get access to the environment or context and that they can't be chained. The return value of a filter should be `True` or `False`. The purpose of a filter is to give the template designers the possibility to perform type and conformability checks. Here a simple filter that checks if a variable is a prime number:: import math def is_prime(n): if n == 2: return True for i in xrange(2, int(math.ceil(math.sqrt(n))) + 1): if n % i == 0: return False return True You can register it on the template environment by updating the :attr:`~Environment.tests` dict on the environment:: environment.tests['prime'] = is_prime A template designer can then use the test like this: .. sourcecode:: jinja {% if 42 is prime %} 42 is a prime number {% else %} 42 is not a prime number {% endif %} .. _global-namespace: The Global Namespace -------------------- Variables stored in the :attr:`Environment.globals` dict are special as they are available for imported templates too, even if they are imported without context. This is the place where you can put variables and functions that should be available all the time. Additionally :attr:`Template.globals` exist that are variables available to a specific template that are available to all :meth:`~Template.render` calls.