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I've just done my first little webapp in django and I love it. I'm about to start on converting an old production PHP site into django and as part its template, there is a navigation bar.

In PHP, I check each nav option's URL against the current URL, in the template code and apply a CSS class if they line up. It's horrendously messy.

Is there something better for django or a good way of handling the code in the template?

To start, how would I go about getting the current URL?

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19 Answers

up vote 42 down vote accepted

I use template inheritance to customize navigation. For example:

base.html

<html>
    <head>...</head>
    <body>
        ...
        {% block nav %}
        <ul id="nav">
            <li>{% block nav-home %}<a href="{% url home %}">Home</a>{% endblock %}</li>
            <li>{% block nav-about %}<a href="{% url about %}">About</a>{% endblock %}</li>
            <li>{% block nav-contact %}<a href="{% url contact %}">Contact</a>{% endblock %}</li>
        </ul>
        {% endblock %}
        ...
    </body>
</html>

about.html

{% extends "base.html" %}

{% block nav-about %}<strong class="nav-active">About</strong>{% endblock %}
share|improve this answer
I like this idea a lot, especially for flexibility, but it comes with the less-DRY trade-off. I did start using this in a site though. – anonymous coward Sep 22 '09 at 14:47
13  
I'm not enthusiastic about this approach because it's not uncommon to have multiple site sections handled by the same sub-template. So you end up putting custom vars in views and conditionals in templates, or re-arranging sub-templates so they're all unique... all just to detect the current site section. The template tag approach ends up being cleaner in the end. – shacker Feb 20 '10 at 6:32
I looked at a few other solutions, and it seems like they're all a bit of a hack. This one, at least, is pretty straightforward and simple to implement/scrap. – mlissner Jul 6 '11 at 1:54
I refactored the <ul id="nav">....</ul> to a different file, lets say tabs.html. So now base.html contained {%block nav%}{%include "tabs.html"%}{%endblock%} and then highlighting of the active tab stopped working(in about.html above). Am I missing anything ? – None-da Sep 1 '11 at 16:37
@Maddy You've got enough indirection going on that I'm not absolutely certain I'm keeping it straight in my head, but I think the answer has to do with how the include tag works. Check out the note included in the docs: docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#include In your case, by the time you're trying to override the base template in about.html, I think you've already got a rendered HTML block, rather than a Django template block waiting to be processed. – jpwatts Sep 4 '11 at 0:04

You do not need an if to do that, have a look at the following code:

## tags.py
@register.simple_tag
def active(request, pattern):
    import re
    if re.search(pattern, request.path):
        return 'active'
    return ''

## urls.py
urlpatterns += patterns('',
    (r'/$', view_home_method, 'home_url_name'),
    (r'/services/$', view_services_method, 'services_url_name'),
    (r'/contact/$', view_contact_method, 'contact_url_name'),
)

## base.html

{% load tags %}

{% url home_url_name as home %}
{% url services_url_name as services %}
{% url contact_url_name as contact %}

<div id="navigation">
    <a class="{% active request home %}" href="home">Home</a>
    <a class="{% active request services %}" href="services">Services</a>
    <a class="{% active request contact %}" href="contact">Contact</a>
</div>

that's it. for implementation details have a look at:
gnuvince.wordpress.com
110j.wordpress.com

share|improve this answer
Very good! Thanks! – xaralis Jul 30 '10 at 9:25
The href's properties are missing django template brackets {{, }}. For example, <a class="{% active request home %}" href="home">Home</a> should be, <a class="{% active request home %}" href="{{home}}">Home</a> the tags.py file will also need a few includes. Otherwise, great solution! – bsk Sep 23 '10 at 21:31
1  
+1 This is more loosely coupled from applications. As a beginner I figured out tags needs it's own app, you can't just dump that into a global tags.py file. I created a new app called tags and everything went smoothly. docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/howto/custom-template-tags – Keyo Jan 19 '11 at 7:00
1  
@Keyo, create a templatetags directory in your project, and add your project to installedapps. That'll also do the trick. Alternatively, like you said, create your main site as an app within your project. – Josh Smeaton Mar 22 '11 at 22:38
One thing I don't like about this is that you set the variables using the url tag. Instead, a cleaner solution may be to do the url reversal within the simple tag. – shawnjan Mar 16 '12 at 22:52

I liked the cleanness of 110j above so I took most of it and refactored to solve the 3 problems I had with it:

  1. the regular expression was matching the 'home' url against all others
  2. I needed multiple URLs mapped to one navigation tab, so I needed a more complex tag that takes variable amount of parameters
  3. fixed some url problems

Here it is:

## tags.py
from django import template

register = template.Library()

@register.tag
def active(parser, token):
    import re
    args = token.split_contents()
    template_tag = args[0]
    if len(args) < 2:
        raise template.TemplateSyntaxError, "%r tag requires at least one argument" % template_tag
    return NavSelectedNode(args[1:])

class NavSelectedNode(template.Node):
    def __init__(self, patterns):
        self.patterns = patterns
    def render(self, context):
        path = context['request'].path
        for p in self.patterns:
            pValue = template.Variable(p).resolve(context)
            if path == pValue:
                return "-active"
        return ""

## urls.py
urlpatterns += patterns(”,
    url(r’/$’, view_home_method, {}, name=‘home_url_name‘),
    url(r’/services/$’, view_services_method, {}, name=‘services_url_name‘),
    url(r’/contact/$’, view_contact_method, {}, name=‘contact_url_name‘),
    url(r’/contact/$’, view_contact2_method, {}, name=‘contact2_url_name‘),
)

## base.html

{% load tags %}

{% url home_url_name as home %}
{% url services_url_name as services %}
{% url contact_url_name as contact %}
{% url contact2_url_name as contact2 %}

<div id="navigation">
    <a class="{% active request home %}" href="home">Home</a>
    <a class="{% active request services %}" href="services">Services</a>
    <a class="{% active request contact contact2 %}" href="contact">Contact</a>
</div>
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You could apply a class or id to the body element of the page, rather than to a specific nav item.

HTML:

<body class="{{ nav_class }}">

CSS:

body.home #nav_home,
body.about #nav_about { */ Current nav styles */ }
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I do it like this:

<a class="tab {% ifequal active_tab "statistics" %}active{% endifequal %}" href="{% url Member.Statistics %}">Statistics</a>

and then all I have to do is in my view add {'active_tab': 'statistics'} to my context dictionary.

If you are using RequestContext you can get current path in your template as:

{{ request.path }}

And in your view:

from django.template import RequestContext

def my_view(request):
    # do something awesome here
    return template.render(RequestContext(request, context_dict))
share|improve this answer
Thanks for sharing this info. I used this method, but also had a flatpage in my nav bar, so to detect that and highlight it correctly, I used {% ifequal flatpage.url '/about/' %}. I don't like the hardcoded detection of the URL, but it works for a once-off hack. – Matt Garrison Jan 21 '10 at 23:20
The problem with this solution is that you have hard-coded "statistics" into the code. This defeats the purpose of using the url tag to get the url of the page. – justin Jun 14 '10 at 11:48

I took the code from nivhab above and removed some wierdness and made it into a clean templatetag, modified it so that /account/edit/ will still make /account/ tab active.

#current_nav.py
from django import template

register = template.Library()

@register.tag
def current_nav(parser, token):
    import re
    args = token.split_contents()
    template_tag = args[0]
    if len(args) < 2:
        raise template.TemplateSyntaxError, "%r tag requires at least one argument" % template_tag
    return NavSelectedNode(args[1])

class NavSelectedNode(template.Node):
    def __init__(self, url):
        self.url = url

    def render(self, context):
        path = context['request'].path
        pValue = template.Variable(self.url).resolve(context)
        if (pValue == '/' or pValue == '') and not (path  == '/' or path == ''):
            return ""
        if path.startswith(pValue):
            return ' class="current"'
        return ""



#template.html
{% block nav %}
{% load current_nav %}
{% url home as home_url %}
{% url signup as signup_url %}
{% url auth_login as auth_login_url %}
<ul class="container">
    <li><a href="{{ home_url }}"{% current_nav home_url %} title="Home">Home</a></li>
    <li><a href="{{ auth_login_url }}"{% current_nav auth_login_url %} title="Login">Login</a></li>
    <li><a href="{{ signup_url }}"{% current_nav signup_url %} title="Signup">Signup</a></li>
</ul>
{% endblock %}
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This is just a variant of the css solution proposed by Toba above:

Include the following in your base template:

<body id="section-{% block section %}home{% endblock %}">

Then in your templates that extend the base use:

{% block section %}show{% endblock %}

You can then use css to highlight the current area based on the body tag (for example if we have a link with an id of nav-home):

#section-home a#nav-home{
 font-weight:bold;
}
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You could use the reverse function with the appropriate parameters to get the current url.

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Thanks for your answers so far, gents. I've gone for something slightly different again..

In my template:

<li{{ link1_active }}>...link...</li>
<li{{ link2_active }}>...link...</li>
<li{{ link3_active }}>...link...</li>
<li{{ link4_active }}>...link...</li>

Once I've worked out which page I'm on in the logic (usually in urls.py), I pass class="selected" as part of the context under the right name to the template.

Eg if I'm on the link1 page, I'll append {'link1_active':' class="selected"'} to the context for the template to scoop up and inject.

It appears to work and it's fairly clean.

Edit: to keep HTML out of my controller/view, I've modified this a bit:

<li{% if link1_active %} class="selected"{% endif %}>...link...</li>
<li{% if link2_active %} class="selected"{% endif %}>...link...</li>
...

It makes the template a little less readable, but I agree, it's better to not push through raw HTML from the urls file.

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1  
You should really avoid handling raw HTML in your view, which is what this technique requires. Have you thought about writing a custom template tag? – Justin Voss Dec 5 '08 at 22:39
You're right. I've edited to stop passing through the HTML. I just pass through True now. I haven't written any template tags yet, but yes, this could be a good place to start. – Oli Dec 10 '08 at 13:09

I have multiple menus on the same page that are created dynamically through a loop. The posts above relating to the context gave me a quick fix. Hope this helps somebody. (I use this in addition to the active template tag - my fix solves the dynamic issue). It seems like a silly comparison, but it works. I chose to name the variables active_something-unique and something-unique, this way it works with nested menus.

Here is a portion of the view (enough to understand what i am doing):

def project_list(request, catslug):
    "render the category detail page"
    category = get_object_or_404(Category, slug=catslug, site__id__exact=settings.SITE_ID)
    context = {
        'active_category': 
            category,
        'category': 
            category,
        'category_list': 
            Category.objects.filter(site__id__exact=settings.SITE_ID),

    }

And this is from the template:

<ul>
  {% for category in category_list %}
    <li class="tab{% ifequal active_category category %}-active{% endifequal %}">
      <a href="{{ category.get_absolute_url }}">{{ category.cat }}</a>
    </li>
  {% endfor %}
</ul>
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My solution was to write a simple context processor to set a variable based on the request path:

def navigation(request):
"""
Custom context processor to set the navigation menu pointer.
"""
nav_pointer = ''
if request.path == '/':
    nav_pointer = 'main'
elif request.path.startswith('/services/'):
    nav_pointer = 'services'
elif request.path.startswith('/other_stuff/'):
    nav_pointer = 'other_stuff'
return {'nav_pointer': nav_pointer}

(Don't forget to add your custom processor to TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS in settings.py.)

Then in the base template I use an ifequal tag per link to determine whether to append the "active" class. Granted this approach is strictly limited to the flexibility of your path structure, but it works for my relatively modest deployment.

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I think it really makes sense to have these in the global context, so you can reference the site section in various ways (using different templates for different site sections for example. +1. – shacker Feb 26 '12 at 6:36

I just wanted to share my minor enhancement to nivhab's post. In my application I have subnavigations and I did not want to hide them using just CSS, so I needed some sort of "if" tag to display the subnavigation for an item or not.

from django import template
register = template.Library()

@register.tag
def ifnaviactive(parser, token):
    nodelist = parser.parse(('endifnaviactive',))
    parser.delete_first_token()

    import re
    args = token.split_contents()
    template_tag = args[0]
    if len(args) < 2:
        raise template.TemplateSyntaxError, "%r tag requires at least one argument" % template_tag
    return NavSelectedNode(args[1:], nodelist)

class NavSelectedNode(template.Node):
    def __init__(self, patterns, nodelist):
        self.patterns = patterns
        self.nodelist = nodelist

    def render(self, context):
        path = context['request'].path
        for p in self.patterns:
            pValue = template.Variable(p).resolve(context)
            if path == pValue:
                return self.nodelist.render(context)
        return ""

You can use this basically in the same way as the active tag:

{% url product_url as product %}

{% ifnaviactive request product %}
    <ul class="subnavi">
        <li>Subnavi item for product 1</li>
        ...
    </ul>
{% endifnaviactive %}
share|improve this answer

I'm the author of django-lineage which I wrote specifically to solve this question :D

I became annoyed using the (perfectly acceptable) jpwatts method in my own projects and drew inspiration from 110j's answer. Lineage looks like this:

{% load lineage %}
<div id="navigation">
    <a class="{% ancestor '/home/' %}" href="/home/">Home</a>
    <a class="{% ancestor '/services/' %}" href="/services/">Services</a>
    <a class="{% ancestor '/contact/' %}" href="/contact/">Contact</a>
</div>

ancestor is simply replaced with "active" if the argument matches the start of current page URL.

Variable arguments, and full {% url %} type reverse resolution, is also supported. I sprinkled in a few configuration options and fleshed it out a little and packaged it up for everyone to use.

If anyone is interested, read a bit more about it at:

>> github.com/marcuswhybrow/django-lineage

share|improve this answer
1  
Your app is awesome, thanks! – Ivan Kharlamov May 8 at 18:35

Just another ehnancement of the original solution.

This accept multiple patterns and which is best also unnamed patterns written as relative URL wrapped in '"', like following:

{% url admin:clients_client_changelist as clients %}
{% url admin:clients_town_changelist as towns %}
{% url admin:clients_district_changelist as districts %}

<li class="{% active "/" %}"><a href="/">Home</a></li>
<li class="{% active clients %}"><a href="{{ clients }}">Clients</a></li>
{% if request.user.is_superuser %}
<li class="{% active towns districts %}">
    <a href="#">Settings</a>
    <ul>
        <li><a href="{{ towns }}">Towns</a></li>
        <li><a href="{{ districts }}">Districts</a></li>
    </ul>
</li>
{% endif %}

Tag goes like this:

from django import template

register = template.Library()

@register.tag
def active(parser, token):
    args = token.split_contents()
    template_tag = args[0]
    if len(args) < 2:
        raise template.TemplateSyntaxError, "%r tag requires at least one argument" % template_tag
    return NavSelectedNode(args[1:])

class NavSelectedNode(template.Node):
    def __init__(self, urls):
        self.urls = urls

    def render(self, context):
        path = context['request'].path

        for url in self.urls:
            if '"' not in url:
                cpath = template.Variable(url).resolve(context)
            else:
                cpath = url.strip('"')

            if (cpath == '/' or cpath == '') and not (path == '/' or path == ''):
                return ""
            if path.startswith(cpath):
                return 'active'
        return ""
share|improve this answer

Slightly modifying Andreas' answer, it looks like you can pass in the name of the route from urls.py to the template tag. In my example my_tasks, and then in the template tag function use the reverse function to work out what the URL should be, then you can match that against the URL in the request object (available in the template context)

from django import template
from django.core.urlresolvers import reverse

register = template.Library()

@register.tag
def active(parser, token):
    args = token.split_contents()
    template_tag = args[0]
    if len(args) < 2:
        raise template.TemplateSyntaxError, "%r tag requires at least one argument" % template_tag
    return NavSelectedNode(args[1:])

class NavSelectedNode(template.Node):
    def __init__(self, name):
        self.name = name

    def render(self, context):

        if context['request'].path == reverse(self.name[1]):
            return 'active'
        else:
            return ''

urls.py

url(r'^tasks/my', my_tasks, name = 'my_tasks' ),

template.html

<li class="{% active request all_tasks %}"><a href="{% url all_tasks %}">Everyone</a></li>
share|improve this answer
Maybe, a more straightforward approach: turnkeylinux.org/blog/django-navbar – jgsogo Jul 11 '12 at 15:44

Here's my go at it. I ended up implementing a class in my views that contains my navigation structure (flat with some metadata). I then inject this to the template and render it out.

My solution deals with i18n. It probably should be abstracted out a bit more but I haven't really bothered with that really.

views.py:

from django.utils.translation import get_language, ugettext as _


class Navi(list):
    items = (_('Events'), _('Users'), )

    def __init__(self, cur_path):
        lang = get_language()
        first_part = '/' + cur_path.lstrip('/').split('/')[0]

        def set_status(n):
            if n['url'] == first_part:
                n['status'] == 'active'

        for i in self.items:
            o = {'name': i, 'url': '/' + slugify(i)}
            set_status(o)
            self.append(o)

# remember to attach Navi() to your template context!
# ie. 'navi': Navi(request.path)

I defined the template logic using includes like this. Base template:

{% include "includes/navigation.html" with items=navi %}

Actual include (includes/navigation.html):

 <ul class="nav">
     {% for item in items %}
         <li class="{{ item.status }}">
             <a href="{{ item.url }}">{{ item.name }}</a>
         </li>
     {% endfor %}
 </ul>

Hopefully someone will find this useful! I guess it would be pretty easy to extend that idea to support nested hierarchies etc.

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Create an include template "intranet/nav_item.html":

{% load url from future %}

{% url view as view_url %}
<li class="nav-item{% ifequal view_url request.path %} current{% endifequal %}">
    <a href="{{ view_url }}">{{ title }}</a>
</li>

And include it in the nav element:

<ul>
    {% include "intranet/nav_item.html" with view='intranet.views.home' title='Home' %}
    {% include "intranet/nav_item.html" with view='crm.views.clients' title='Clients' %}
</ul>

And you need to add this to settings:

from django.conf import global_settings
TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS = global_settings.TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS + (
    'django.core.context_processors.request',
)
share|improve this answer

I used jquery to highlight my navbars.

<script type="text/javascript" src="/static/js/jquery.js"></script>
<script>
    $(document).ready(function(){
        var path = location.pathname;
        $('ul.navbar a.nav[href$="' + path + '"]').addClass("active");
    });
</script>
share|improve this answer

here is pretty simple solution, https://github.com/hellysmile/django-activeurl

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Please note that you should post the useful points of an answer here, on this site, or your post risks being deleted as "Not an Answer". You may still include the link if you wish, but only as a 'reference'. The answer should stand on its own without needing the link. – Andrew Barber Feb 21 at 6:13

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