Why and When to use Django mark_safe() function

day picture day · Sep 26, 2015 · Viewed 15.4k times · Source

After reading the document, the function of mark_safe() is still unclear. I guess it is related to CSRF stuff. But why and when shall the mark_safe() be used?

Here is the documentation

mark_safe(s)

Explicitly mark a string as safe for (HTML) output purposes. The returned object can be used everywhere a string or unicode object is appropriate.

Can be called multiple times on a single string.

For building up fragments of HTML, you should normally be using django.utils.html.format_html() instead.

String marked safe will become unsafe again if modified. For example:

Answer

allo picture allo · Sep 26, 2015

Django is a framework, which tries to do "the right" thing by default. This means when you do the most simple thing, you're propably doing the right thing.

Now let's look at some template in php and python:

PHP:

<? echo $foo ?>

May give:

<script src="evil">

Django:

{{ foo }}

Gives with the same input:

&gt;script src="evil"&lt;

Now assume, you want to place a link <a href="link">text</a>. Then django will render it as text using &lt;&gt; again. If you know what you're doing, you can now use mark_safe to indicate that the text is trusted (i.e. not coming from userinput).

Usually you will use {{ foo|safe }} or {% autoescape off %}{{ foo }}{% endautoescape %} in your templates as django programmer, which is more clear when the string is declared as being safe.

So, where is mark_safe used? When you write own templatetags or filters, then you need to mark the string as safe from python, because the developer will assume, that {{ foo|mylinkifyfunction }} does the right thing (i.e. it escapes the url foo, but does not escape the <a href=""></a> around the url).