1

I have three conditions to a given object, 1. to start, 2. started, and 3. finished. I filter the objects in view itself and send three variables to the template - tostart_objects, started_objects, and finished_objects.

Now I loop through the three for loops in the html template as follows:

{% for obj in tostart_objects %}
// chunk of html template to display all the object 
{% endfor %}

{% for obj in started_objects %}
// similar chunk of html template as above
{% endfor %}

{% for obj in finished_objects %}
// similar chunk of html template as above
{% endfor %}

Instead of putting the same chunk of code, can I not reuse them at three different places? How can this be done? Please let me know, thanks!

1 Answer 1

5

One way of doing this would be to put the chunk of HTML in a separate template file, and use {% include %} to include it within each loop. Building on that, you could define the whole loop as an inclusion template tag that takes the object list as a parameter.

Alternatively, you could concatenate the three lists in your view, and just loop through the result.

2
  • +1 template tag documentation reference May 2, 2013 at 8:59
  • 3
    This is of course a workaround, but still there is a feature missing in Django templating system. If I only ever use it in a single template, why have another file to depend on? Why can't I see the code all at once, preferably at the site of the first usage? Jan 15, 2014 at 6:27

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