9

According to this thread on the django-developers list, I can't pass the constant False as a parameter to a Django template tag because it will be treated as a variable name not a builtin constant.

But if I want to create a template tag takes needs a true/false parameter, what's the the recommended way to create (in Python) and invoke (in a template) that template tag?

I could simply pass 1 or 0 inside the template and it would work OK, but given that Django template authoring shouldn't require computer programming knowledge (e.g. 1==True, 0==False) of template writers, I was wondering if there is a more appropriate way to handle this case.

Example of tag definition and usage:

@register.simple_tag
def some_tag(some_string, some_boolean = True):
    if some_boolean:
        return some_html()
    else
        return some_other_html()

<!-- Error!  False treated as variable name in Request Context -->
{% some_tag "foobar" False %}

<!-- Works OK, but is there a better option? -->
{% some_tag "foobar" 0 %}
1

1 Answer 1

17

I came up against this problem a while ago, and arrived at the conclusion that using 1 and 0 was the simplest solution.

However an idea might be to add a context processor which adds True and False to the template context using respective names:

# projectname/appname/context_processors.py

def booleans():
    return {
        'True': True,
        'False': False,
    }

Then obviously you would need to add that context processor in your Django settings file:

TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS += {
    'projectname.appname.context_processors.booleans',
}
2
  • Oh, that's cool. Wish someone suggested that to my question :P
    – mpen
    Dec 29, 2010 at 21:39
  • 1
    I'll probably stick with 1 and 0 too, but knowing about the context processor solution will be helpful in the future. thanks! Dec 29, 2010 at 23:29

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