13

I'd like to set default values for variables used in my Jinja template inside of the template itself. Looking at the Jinja2 documentation, I don't see any way to do this. Have I missed something? I see the "default" filter, but I want to set the value template wide instead of a use-by-use basis.

I spent an hour or so trying to teach myself enough about the Jinja2 extension writing process to write an extension tag setdefault, which could look like this:

{% setdefault animal = 'wumpas' %}

The desired effect would be equivalent to the set tag if the assigned-to name was undefined, but to have no effect if the assigned-to name was defined. I have thusfar failed to get this to work.

My work around is to circumvent jinja entirely and make a compound file; the area before a special marker is a (yaml) mapping of default values, and the area after a marker is the jinja template. An proof of concept implementation of this that seems to work fine is:

skel_text = """\
animal: wumpas
%%
The car carried my {{animal}} to the vet.
"""
class Error(Exception): pass
_skel_rx = re.compile(
    r"""((?P<defaults>.*?)^%%[ \t]*\n)?(?P<template>.*)""",
    re.MULTILINE|re.DOTALL)
_env = jinja2.Environment(trim_blocks=True)
def render(skel, **context):
    m = _skel_rx.match(skel_text)
    if not m:
        raise Error('skel split failed')
    defaults = yaml.load(m.group('defaults') or '{}')
    template = _env.from_string(m.group('template') or '')
    template.globals.update(defaults)
    return template.render(**context)

print render(skel_text)
print render(skel_text, animal='cat')

So, is there a way to do the equivalent in stock Jinja2, or how might one write an extension to accomplish the desired effect?

3 Answers 3

32

What worked for me was to use a filter:

t = '''Hello {{name | default('John Doe')}}'''
1
  • 4
    default was created for exactly this purpose and should be the accepted answer, IMHO. Another idiom is to use default in conjunction with set at the top of your templates. ala {% set name = name|default('John Doe') %}. Now you can freely use name throughout your template without fear of it being undefined.
    – Dave
    Dec 24, 2015 at 17:34
14

The set control structure can do what you want.

Here is some code I used to test:

from jinja2 import Template
t = '''{% set name=name or "John Doe" %}Hello {{ name }}'''
template = Template(t)
print template.render(name='Jonnie Doe')
print template.render()

As expected, it outputs:

Hello Jonnie Doe
Hello John Doe
1
  • It's not exactly what I was hoping for, but I'll admit doing it that way hadn't occurred to me. Sounds good. Dec 19, 2010 at 15:51
1

Just to update, there's a way in Jinja2 to set default values to variables if they "fail". By fail, we mean they have no values.

{{ variable | default(0) }}

This code will set the value of a variable to 0 if its value is not provided to template. If your variable is a dictionary then you can use following piece of code:

{{ dict['key'] | default(0) }}

In this case, if dict['key'] value is not defined or 'key' does not exist in the first place then its value will be set to 0.

For more information look at: Jinja2 Filters Documentation

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