I am using Flask micro-framework for my server which uses Jinja templates.
I have a parent template.html
and some children templates called child1.html
and child2.html
, some of these children templates are pretty large HTML files and I would like to somehow split them for better lucidity over my work.
Contents of my main.py
script:
from flask import Flask, request, render_template
app = Flask(__name__)
@app.route('/')
@app.route('/<task>')
def home(task=''):
return render_template('child1.html', task=task)
app.run()
The simplified template.html
:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head></head>
<body>
<div class="container">
{% block content %}{% endblock %}
</div>
</body>
</html>
The magic is in child1.html
:
{% extends 'template.html' %}
{% block content %}
{% if task == 'content1' %}
<!-- include content1.html -->
{% endif %}
{% if task == 'content2' %}
<!-- include content2.html -->
{% endif %}
{% endblock %}
Instead of the comments:
<!-- include content1.html -->
I have a lot of html text, and it is very hard to keep track of changes and not to make some mistakes, which are then pretty hard to find and correct.
I'd like to just load the content1.html
instead of writing it all in child1.html
.
I came across this question, but I had problems implementing it.
I think Jinja2 might have a better tool for that.
NOTE: The code above might not be working properly, I just wrote it to illustrate the problem.
Use the jinja2 {% include %}
directive.
{% extends 'template.html' %}
{% block content %}
{% if task == 'content1' %}
{% include 'content1.html' %}
{% endif %}
{% if task == 'content2' %}
{% include 'content2.html' %}
{% endif %}
{% endblock %}
This will include the content from the correct content-file.