I'm developing an application in django and I don't know how to use the Django template system to achieve block overriding using template inheritance.
I've got a base.html
template:
[...]
<body>
{% block content %}
{% endblock %}
</body>
[...]
there's index.html
template that displays a JS slider (it's content reside in body
tag directly):
{% extends "base.html" %}
{% block content %}
// some javascript/css slider stuff here
{% endblock %}
and there are some dynamic content pages: list.html
, form.html
, etc (their content shall reside in some div
containers). I define container.html
somehow like the following:
{% extends "base.html" %}
{% block content %}
<div class="container marketing">
<div class="container">
{% put overriden "content" block here %}
</div>
</div>
{% endblock %}
And then I can define list.html
like this:
{% extends "container.html" %} # note what I'm extending here!
{% block content %}
this is my list
{% endblock %}
Why?
I want to keep my base template as generic as possible (e.g. to enable client-side slider - with no div
containers). And I want to wrap most of my dynamic pages (list, form, etc.) in the same HTML container code. Since I don't want to repeat this code, this should be available in one template (a template to be extended by list, form, etc).
I know I could define another block inside. But maybe there is a better solution?