I'm writing a class that will be returned by a custom template filter. It has a __str__
method that returns HTML. I don't want that HTML to be escaped.
I've tried just calling mark_safe
on my string before returning it from the __str__
method, but the result is escaped. I'm assuming this is because Django is checking if the object is safe before converting it to a string?
Can I somehow mark the class itself as safe?
e.g.
class ParagraphTag(object):
def __init__(self, text):
self.text = text
def __str__(self):
return mark_safe('<p>{}</p>'.format(self.text + 'baz'))
@register.filter(name='paragraph_tag')
def paragraph_tag(text):
return ParagraphTag(text)
Rendering a paragraph tag object in a template then results in it being escaped.
e.g. {{ paragraph_tag }}
-> <p>foo</p>
If I call mark_safe
on the ParagraphTag
object itself when returning it from my template filter, then it gets turned into a SafeBytes
object which is not what I want. I want to have the rich object available in my template and only have it converted to a string when rendered.
SafeBytes
object. My goal was to have an object of which I could interrogate individual attributes, for example as part of ahaschanged
block, but knows how to render itself as HTML.