I have a base.html template that contains a list of links.
Example:
<div id="sidebar1">
<ul>
<li><a href="/" title="">Index</a></li>
<li><a href="/stuff/" title="" class="current">Stuff</a></li>
<li><a href="/about/" title="">About Me</a></li>
<li><a href="/contact/" title="">Contact Me</a></li>
</div>
Then I have in my views.py a definition for each of index.html, stuff.html, about.html and contact.html. Each of those templates simply derive from a base.html template and set their own respective titles and contents.
My question is about the above /stuff I have a class="current".
I'd like to make the current page that I'm on have that class attribute.
I could set a different variable in each view like current_page="about" and then do a compare in the template with {% ifequal %}
in each class element of each link , but that seems like duplicating work (because of the extra view variable).
Is there a better way? Maybe if there is a way to get the view function name that the template was filled from automatically I would not need to set the extra variable? Also it does seem like a lot of ifequals.
{% %} and {{ }} are part of Django templating language. They are used to pass the variables from views to template. {% %} is basically used when you have an expression and are called tags while {{ }} is used to simply access the variable.
Here's an elegant way to do this, which I copied from somewhere and I only wish I could remember where, so I could give them the credit. 8-)
I assign an id
to each of my pages (or all the pages within a section) like this:
In index.html: <body id='section-intro'>...
In faq.html: <body id='section-faq'>...
In download.html: <body id='section-download'>...
And then an id
for the corresponding links:
<li id='nav-intro'><a href="./">Introduction</a></li>
<li id='nav-faq'><a href="./faq.html">FAQ</a></li>
<li id='nav-download'><a href="./download.html">Download</a></li>
And the in the CSS I set a rule like this:
#section-intro #nav-intro,
#section-faq #nav-faq,
#section-download #nav-download {
font-weight: bold;
/* And whatever other styles the current link should have. */
}
So this works in a mostly declarative way to control the style of the link that the current page belongs in. You can see it in action here: http://entrian.com/source-search/
It's a very clean and simple system once you've set it up, because:
switch
statements or if / else / else
statementsI'm not using Django, but this system works anywhere. In your case, where you "set their own respective titles and contents" you also need to set the body id
, and there's no other Django markup required.
This idea extends easily to other situations as well, eg. "I want a download link in the sidebar on every page except the download pages themselves." You can do that in CSS like this:
#section-download #sidebar #download-link {
display: none;
}
rather than having to put conditional template markup in the sidebar HTML.
Haven't used Django, but I've dealt with the same issue in Kohana (PHP) and Rails.
What I do in Kohana:
<li><a href="/admin/dashboard" <?= (get_class($this) == 'Dashboard_Controller') ? "class=\"active\"" : NULL ?>>Dashboard</a></li>
<li><a href="/admin/campaigns" <?= (get_class($this) == 'Campaigns_Controller') ? "class=\"active\"" : NULL ?>>Campaigns</a></li>
<li><a href="/admin/lists" <?= (get_class($this) == 'Lists_Controller') ? "class=\"active\"" : NULL ?>>Lists</a></li>
What I do in Rails:
<li><a href="/main" <%= 'class="active"' if (controller.controller_name == 'main') %>>Overview</a></li>
<li><a href="/notifications" <%= 'class="active"' if (controller.controller_name == 'notifications') %>>Notifications</a></li>
<li><a href="/reports" <%= 'class="active"' if (controller.controller_name == 'reports') %>>Reports</a></li>
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