Aaron Harris
Posted on October 15, 2019
Introduction to Django templates
Django, as a web framework, uses templates as a way of producing static HTML from the output of a Django view. In practice, Django’s templates are simply HTML files, with some special syntax and a set of tools which lets Django render the HTML page on-the-fly for the visiting user. Templates are highly customizable, but are meant to be simple, with most of the “heavy” logic going into the view. Let’s dive deeper and learn some standard ways of dealing with common problems.
Simple start with Django templates
By default, Django comes with a ton of built-in template tags and filters that help us perform repeatable template tasks throughout our apps.
Tags: Tags provide arbitrary logic in the rendering process. Django leaves this definition fairly vague, but tags are able to output content, grab content from the database (more on this later), or perform control operations like if statements or for loops.
Examples of tags*:*
{% firstof user.is_active user.is_staff user.is_deleted %}
The firstof
tag will output the first provided variable which evaluates to True
. This is a good replacement for a large if/elif/elif/elif/elif
block that’s just evaluating on truthiness within your Django templates.
<ul>
{% for product in product_list %}
<li>{{ product.name }}: ${{ product.price }}</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
The for
tag in Django will loop over each item in a list, making that item (product, in this case) available in the template context before the tag is closed with endfor
. This is a widely used pattern when working with lists of Django model instances which have been returned from the view.
Filters: Filters transform the values of variables and arguments. Filters would be used in tasks like rendering a string in uppercase or formatting a date string into a user’s region.
Examples of filters*:*
{{ value|date:'D d M Y' }}
The date filter will format a date (value
, in the example) given a string with some format characters. The example would output the string: Mon 01 Apr 2019
.
{{ value|slugify }}
The slugify filter will convert the spaces of a string into hyphens and convert the string to lowercase, among other things. The output of this example would-look-something-like-this
.
Project structure
Django, by default, will make some assumptions about the structure of our project when it’s looking for templates. Knowing this, we can set up our project with a template directory and application template directories.
Imagine a project, cloud*,* with the following structure:
cloud/
accounts/
urls.py
models.py
views.py
templates/
accounts/
login.html
register.html
blog/
urls.py
views.py
models.py
templates/
blog/
create.html
post.html
list.html
config/
settings/
base.py
local.py
urls.py
manage.py
templates/
includes/
messages.html
modal.html
base.html
logged_in.html
How inheritance works for Django templates
An important aspect of Django’s templating system is template inheritance. Django applications are meant to be reusable, and we can apply the same methodology to our templates by inheriting common HTML from other templates.
A typical pattern is to have a common base template for common aspects of your application, logged-in pages, logged-out pages, or in places where significant changes are made to the underlying HTML. From our example above, base.html
would contain most of the core structure that would make up each page, with blocks defined for app or page-specific customizations.
For example, base.html
may contain:
{% load static %}
<!doctype html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1, shrink-to-fit=no">
{% block page_meta %}
{% endblock %}
{# Vendor styles #}
{% block vendor_css %}
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="all" href="{% static 'css/vendor.css' %}" />
{% endblock %}
{# Global styles #}
{% block site_css %}
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="all" href="{% static 'css/application.css' %}" />
{% endblock %}
{# Page-specific styles #}
{% autoescape off %}
{% block page_css %}{% endblock %}
{% endautoescape %}
{% block extra_head %}
{# Extra header stuff (scripts, styles, metadata, etc) #}
{% endblock %}
<title>{% block page_title %}{% endblock %}</title>
</head>
<body class="{% block body_class %}{% endblock %}">
{% block body %}
{# Page content will go here #}
{% endblock %}
{# Modal HTML #}
{% block modals %}
{% endblock %}
{# Vendor javascript #}
{% block vendor_js %}
<script src="{% static 'js/vendor.js' %}"></script>
{% endblock %}
{# Global javascript #}
{% block site_js %}
<script src="{% static 'js/application.js' %}"></script>
{% endblock %}
{# Shared data for javascript #}
<script type="text/javascript">
window._sharedData = {
{% autoescape off %}
{% block shared_data %}
'DEBUG': {% if debug %}true{% else %}false{% endif %},
{% endblock %}
{% endautoescape %}
}
</script>
{# Page javascript #}
{% autoescape off %}
{% block page_js %}
{% endblock %}
{% endautoescape %}
</body>
</html>
There are a few things done in this example specifically for the sake of inheritance. Most notably, this base template has blocks defined for nearly every customizable aspect of the underlying HTML. Blocks for including CSS, JavaScript, an HTML title, meta tags, and more are all defined.
We use Django’s autoescape
template tag surrounding blocks where we don’t want Django to autoescape our HTML tags or JavaScript, but rather treat the contents of the block literally.
Our shared_data
block allows us to populate a global JavaScript object with variables and data which we may want to share between Django and any running JavaScript on the page (populating React or Vue.js components, for example.)
For example, if we wanted to pass a Django URL to one of our JavaScript files, we could do something like this:
{% extends 'base.html' %}
{% block shared_data %}
{{ block.super }}
'USERS_AUTOCOMPLETE_ENDPOINT': '{% url 'api:users:autocomplete' %}',
{% endblock %}
Django loads the page and returns in a JavaScript object that you can then use within the JavaScript files on the page:
<script type="text/javascript">
window._sharedData = {
'DEBUG': false,
'USERS_AUTOCOMPLETE_ENDPOINT': '/api/users/autocomplete/',
}
</script>
The inside of a JS console once the page has loaded:
>> window._sharedData.DEBUG
false
>> window._sharedData.USERS_AUTOCOMPLETE_ENDPOINT
'/api/users/autocomplete/'
Handling querysets
Properly handling querysets within your templates can be a performance bottleneck for Django depending on the complexities of your model definitions.
Django’s templating system is tightly coupled with Django’s object-relational mapping layer which returns us data from the database. Without proper consideration of this coupling you may, inadvertently, cause the number of queries run on each page load to jump to unmaintainable amounts. In some cases, this can cause the database to become too sluggish to operate certain pages on your site, or worse, crash and need to be restarted.
Thankfully, Django provides mechanisms and patterns which we can use to make sure our templates are running as fast as possible and we’re not killing the database server.
Consider this common Django pattern:
accounts/views.py
class UserListView(ListView):
template_name = 'accounts/list.html'
model = User
paginate_by = 25
context_object_name = 'users'
queryset = User.objects.all()
accounts/templates/accounts/list.html
...
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Username</th>
<th>Email</th>
<th>Profile photo URL</th>
<th>Joined</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
{% for user in users %}
<tr>
<td>{{ user.username }}</td>
<td>{{ user.email_address }}</td>
<td>{{ user.profile.avatar_url }}</td>
<td>{{ user.created_at }}</td>
</tr>
{% endfor %}
</tbody>
</table>
...
Can you spot the problem? It may not be obvious at first, but look at this line:
<td>{{ user.profile.avatar_url }}</td>
When Django is processing and rendering our template (line by line), it will need to do an additional query to grab information from the profile object as it’s a related field. In our example view, we’re paginating by 25 users, so this one line in the template could account for an additional 25 queries (on each page request as the profile object, as with all related objects and models in Django) which aren’t included in the original query for the 25 users. You can imagine how this could become a very slow page if we were including fields from other related objects in our table, or if we were paginating by 100 users instead of 25.
To resolve this, we’ll change one line in our view, accounts/views.py
, to select related objects when we’re running our original query for users:
class UserListView(ListView):
template_name = 'accounts/list.html'
model = User
paginate_by = 25
context_object_name = 'users'
queryset = User.objects.select_related('profile')
By replacing our User.objects.all()
with User.objects.select_related(‘profile’)
, we’re telling Django to include related profile instances when it’s performing its query for our users. This will include the Profile
model on each User
instance, preventing Django from needing to run an extra query each time we ask for information from the profile within the template.
Django’s select_related
functionality does not work with many-to-many model relationships, or with many-to-one relationships. For this, we’d want to use Django’s prefetch_related
method.
Unlike select_related
, prefetch_related
does its magic in Python, as opposed to SQL select statements, by joining related objects into instances which can be accessed in templates as we’ve done above. It doesn’t perform things in a single query like select_related
is able to, but it’s much more efficient than running a query each time you request a related attribute.
A prefetch for related projects and organizations and one-to-many relationships off of the User
model would look like this:
... check out the full article and source code from kite.com!
Zac Clancy is Vice President at Global DIRT (Disaster Immediate Response Team)
Posted on October 15, 2019
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