3

I am rather new to django templates and have an impression that I have not understood some basics.

I have a list of elements and I need to render an element of the list based on conditions against the the previous and the next elements (in case the following or the previous elements are hidden, I need to mark the current element as border element).

How can I reference the previous and the following elements within a for loop in Django templates?

4 Answers 4

11

You could write a custom template filter for next and previous:

def next(value, arg):
    try:
        return value[int(arg)+1]
    except:
        return None

and in the template:

{% for ... %}
  {% with list|next:forloop.counter0 as next %}
    {% if next.is_hidden %}
    ...
    {% endif %} 
  {% endwith %}
{% endfor %}   

but like others have said, there are probably more elegants solutions doing this via your view

2
  • that was my first thought, and it anyway looks like a useful utility =)
    – newtover
    Apr 9, 2012 at 19:51
  • 2
    if you want to get the next item should it not be +1 in the template tag?
    – John
    Nov 29, 2013 at 9:50
3

You can't do this strictly with built-in template tags. You need to involve some Python.

One method would be to zip the list with itself:

new = ([(None, orig[0], orig[1])] + 
       zip(orig, orig[1:], orig[2:]) + 
       [(orig[-2], orig[-1], None)])

and pass that to the template, then loop over it like this:

{% for prev, current, next in new %}
    {% if prev.hidden or next.hidden %}
        BORDER
    {% endif %}
    {{ current }}
{% endfor %}
0
1

You really shouldn't use the Django templates for this kind of logic. You have your views to handle it. I would figure out which elements of the list are borders and pass in an extra parameter that I can handle in the template using a simple if statement. For example:

{% for element,is_border in data.items %}
 {% if is_border %}
   do something
 {% endif %}
{% endfor %}

There are tons of similar ways you can do this. I presented just one example.

4
  • this is a purely presentation issue, I would not like to make the analysis outside templates
    – newtover
    Apr 9, 2012 at 19:46
  • Then you can use the presenter programming paradigm where you have a data manipulation layer as your final step before handing stuff over to templates. Templates really should remain dumb. Django makes an exception and actually allows a little more logic and control in its templating engine than others. Apr 9, 2012 at 19:51
  • You can think of the presenter as a final 'data validator and packager' for display purposes. Apr 9, 2012 at 19:52
  • Thank you, I understand what you are talking about, but I am not a fan of breeding abstraction layers until they are really needed =) Templates could handle the issue without any problems, anyway +1
    – newtover
    Apr 9, 2012 at 20:04
1

You can create an external tag which does that but django templating system which was build to be lightweight has no such feature in for loops.

0

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