142

I want to see if a field/variable is none within a Django template. What is the correct syntax for that?

This is what I currently have:

{% if profile.user.first_name is null %}
  <p> -- </p>
{% elif %}
  {{ profile.user.first_name }} {{ profile.user.last_name }}
{% endif%}

In the example above, what would I use to replace "null"?

9 Answers 9

175

None, False and True all are available within template tags and filters. None, False, the empty string ('', "", """""") and empty lists/tuples all evaluate to False when evaluated by if, so you can easily do

{% if profile.user.first_name == None %}
{% if not profile.user.first_name %}

A hint: @fabiocerqueira is right, leave logic to models, limit templates to be the only presentation layer and calculate stuff like that in you model. An example:

# someapp/models.py
class UserProfile(models.Model):
    user = models.OneToOneField('auth.User')
    # other fields

    def get_full_name(self):
        if not self.user.first_name:
            return
        return ' '.join([self.user.first_name, self.user.last_name])

# template
{{ user.get_profile.get_full_name }}
4
  • I just tried to pass None as a parameter to the {% cache %} tag and learned that it's not available. Busy working around this.
    – tobych
    Sep 19, 2013 at 18:07
  • 7
    {% if profile.user.first_name is None %} causes syntax error in Django template.
    – Rockallite
    Sep 24, 2013 at 4:23
  • 1
    Your hint mixes presentation and logic by putting HTML in your model, doing exactly the opposite of what you are trying to teach. How about returning None if there is no name (logical behaviour for a data model) and then using the default_if_none filter in the template?
    – jbg
    Nov 17, 2013 at 23:46
  • @JasperBryant-Greene you are right! just updated. Good catch man! Thx!
    – Gerard
    Nov 19, 2013 at 0:26
100

You can also use another built-in template default_if_none

{{ profile.user.first_name|default_if_none:"--" }}
3
  • 1
    Any idea how to use this with other filters such as date? For example, is it possible to display "N/A" if a date is none but otherwise format it? Like: {{ post.pub_date|default_if_none:"N/A"|date:"Y-m-d" }}? Jan 7, 2018 at 16:57
  • @AndreasBergström In your case you apply date first. If any error occurs it will return None. Then you apply default_if_none.
    – defance
    Jan 16, 2019 at 14:30
  • What version of Django was this brought in?
    – User
    Feb 21, 2020 at 21:08
17

You can also use the built-in template filter default:

If value evaluates to False (e.g. None, an empty string, 0, False); the default "--" is displayed.

{{ profile.user.first_name|default:"--" }}

Documentation: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/templates/builtins/#default

2
  • 1
    default_if_none would probably be a better option.
    – dbn
    Jan 9, 2015 at 22:22
  • If the output is an empty string, this works while default_if_none does NOT. Choose carefully.
    – gregory
    Jun 29, 2022 at 18:32
16

isoperator : New in Django 1.10

{% if somevar is None %}
  This appears if somevar is None, or if somevar is not found in the context.
{% endif %}
6

Look at the yesno helper

Eg:

{{ myValue|yesno:"itwasTrue,itWasFalse,itWasNone" }}
4

{% if profile.user.first_name %} works (assuming you also don't want to accept '').

if in Python in general treats None, False, '', [], {}, ... all as false.

0
3

In cases where we need to validate for a field with null value, we may check so and process as under:

{% for field in form.visible_fields %}
    {% if field.name == 'some_field' %}
        {% if field.value is Null %}
            {{ 'No data found' }}
        {% else %}
            {{ field }}
        {% endif %}
    {% endif %}
{% endfor %}
1

You could try this:

{% if not profile.user.first_name.value %}
  <p> -- </p>
{% else %}
  {{ profile.user.first_name }} {{ profile.user.last_name }}
{% endif %}

This way, you're essentially checking to see if the form field first_name has any value associated with it. See {{ field.value }} in Looping over the form's fields in Django Documentation.

I'm using Django 3.0.

1

Just a note about previous answers: Everything is correct if we want to display a string, but pay attention if you want to display numbers.

In particular when you have a 0 value bool(0) evaluates to False and so it will not display and probably is not what you want.

In this case better use

{% if profile.user.credit != None %}

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