5

I had a custom simple-tag. And it seems I can't use a filter as its argument.

Here is an example. mysum is the tag. myincrease is the filter. foobar is a variable and I want to pass foobar|myincrease to mysum.

The template:

{% mysum foobar|myincrease 1 2 %}

gives the error:

TemplateSyntaxError at /

Caught VariableDoesNotExist while rendering: Failed lookup for key [foobar|myincrease] in ...

The tag:

@register.simple_tag
def mysum(a, b, c):
    return a + b + c

The filter:

@register.filter
def myincrease(num):
    return num + 1

I have worked around my original problem using other approaches. But I'm still wondering if this is by design, or a mistake of mine, or a bug of django, or something that has been overlooked.

I think calling something like compile_filter in the simple_tag decorator implementation would do it.

3
  • Did you found an answer by yourself ? I'm facing the same problem ^^
    – Maxime R.
    Jun 7, 2012 at 14:54
  • Sorry I don't quite remember now. I think I ended up using the workaround.
    – jsz
    Jun 10, 2012 at 3:33
  • 1
    Seems a django-specific issue: reproducible in 1.3.1, works in 1.4.1.
    – seeg
    Oct 21, 2012 at 9:40

1 Answer 1

1

Though it doesn't appear to be mentioned in the ticket, it looks like the fixing of https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/13956 added filter support to positional arguments to a tag. You can see the commit at https://github.com/django/django/commit/8137027f - the new parse_bits function called compile_filter() on positional arguments.

Another workaround would be to use the {% with %} tag.

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