Created by Stephen McDonald
A Django reusable app providing the overextends
template tag, a
drop-in replacement for Django's extends
tag, which allows you to
use circular template inheritance.
The primary use-case for overextends
is to simultaneously override
and extend templates from other reusable apps, in your own Django project.
Consider the following settings module and templates, with the apps
app1
and app2
bundled in the project, for example's sake:
# settings.py INSTALLED_APPS = ( "app1", "app2", "overextends", ) TEMPLATE_LOADERS = ( "django.template.loaders.filesystem.Loader", "django.template.loaders.app_directories.Loader", ) PROJECT_ROOT = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__)) TEMPLATE_DIRS = (os.path.join(PROJECT_ROOT, "templates"),) <!-- myproject/app1/templates/pages/page.html --> <h1>Title</h1> {% block main %} <p>A paragraph in app1</p> {% enblock %} <footer>Copyright 2012</footer> <!-- myproject/app2/templates/pages/page.html --> {% overextends "pages/page.html" %} {% block main %} <p>A paragraph in app2, that wants to be on top of app1's main block</p> {{ block.super }} {% enblock %} <!-- myproject/templates/pages/page.html --> {% overextends "pages/page.html" %} {% block main %} {{ block.super }} <p>A paragraph in the project's template directory, under the other main blocks</p> {% enblock %}
The resulting HTML rendered when pages/page.html
was loaded would be:
<h1>Title</h1> <p>A paragraph in app2, that wants to be on top of app1's main block</p> <p>A paragraph in app1</p> <p>A paragraph in the project's template directory, under the other main blocks</p> <footer>Copyright 2012</footer>
For a detailed analysis of why you would use this approach, how it works, and alternative approaches, read my initial blog post: Circular Template Inheritance for Django
The easiest way to install django-overextends is directly from PyPi using pip by running the following command:
$ pip install -U django-overextends
Otherwise you can download django-overextends and install it directly from source:
$ python setup.py install
Once installed you can configure your project to use
django-overextends by adding the overextends
app to the
INSTALLED_APPS
in your project's settings
module:
INSTALLED_APPS = ( # ... other apps here ... 'overextends', )
For Django 1.9+ you must add overextends to the builtins key of your TEMPLATES setting:
TEMPLATES = [ { 'BACKEND': 'django.template.backends.django.DjangoTemplates', 'APP_DIRS': True, 'OPTIONS': { 'builtins': ['overextends.templatetags.overextends_tags'], } }, ]
Note that while the overextends
tag is provided by the package
overextends.templatetags.overextends_tags
, it is unnecessary to use
{% load overextends_tags %}
in your templates. Like the extends
tag, overextends
must be the first tag in your template, so it is
automatically added to Django's built-in template tags, removing the
need to load its tag library in each template.