This Django ticket says that they will not add a default Django template file extension. What file extension do you use?
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I wish they would fix it, too (choose an ext). I can't get my editor (Kate) to load django templates with the right highlighting by default.– JALJan 9, 2010 at 23:32
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If you found the answers helpful, don't forget to pick one and mark as accepted.– airstrikeOct 4, 2015 at 17:37
6 Answers
I honestly believe we need a standard extension for django template files. A template is NOT valid CSS/HTML/XML or anything else.
Nick Presta wrote:
- You already know the files are templates because they should be in a template directory
- You don't want to have to open up files to see what they are (HTML, CSS, XML, etc). You would have to do this with a generic extension like .djt.
Point #2 can also be used in favor of a default extension or a mix (like .html.djt). Without a differentiated extension, you need to open a file in order to know it's a django template and not a regular (e.g. HTML) file.
And point #1 is just plain wrong, considering that they are not always in a template directory.
Personaly I use .dj.html
Like that I know what is inside and my editor knows that it contains django template language.
Ruby on Rails uses .html.erb
for erb templates, something similar will work for Django too.
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3It's actually the other way around (
.html.erb
): ruby-forum.com/topic/120053– JoeJan 12, 2011 at 2:56
For HTML pages: .html
For XML data (RSS and such): .xml
Etc
Just because they're templates doesn't mean they should have some sort of special extension.
As mentioned in the ticket:
- You already know the files are templates because they should be in a template directory
- You don't want to have to open up files to see what they are (HTML, CSS, XML, etc). You would have to do this with a generic extension like .djt.
- Most editors get this right with the proper filetype extension anyways so there is little reason to change this convention.
- However, something like .djt could allow for Django specific icons and syntax types.
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+1 except for maybe #4. There's no need for new magic here. Vim and Notepad++ already know about Django template tag highlighting so it may not even be necessary for a
.djt
extension. This ain't Rocket Surgery. Jan 10, 2010 at 4:12 -
Only formatters think this is pure html and formats my templates in ways that break the syntax. Mar 10, 2021 at 7:24
I use the same name I would use for this file, if it wasn't a template. Thanks to this, I instantly know, what to expect inside. And for me every file that is being served is through views is a template, it sometimes just isn't filled with anything or even doesn't use markup language.