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How to get a list of current variables from Jinja 2 template?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-01-09 21:18 出处:网络
If I return a Jinja2 template like so: return render_response(\'home.htm\', 开发者_开发问答**context)

If I return a Jinja2 template like so: return render_response('home.htm', 开发者_开发问答**context)

How do then get a list of the variables in context from within the template?


Technically, because context is not passed as a named dictionary, a little work is required to generate a list of the context variables from inside a template. It is possible though.

  1. Define a Jinja context function to return the jinja2.Context object, which is essentially a dictionary of the global variables/functions

  2. Make that function available in the global namespace; i.e. a jinja2.Environment or jinja2.Template globals dictionary

  3. Optionally, filter objects from the context; for instance, use callable() to skip Jinja's default global helper functions (range, joiner, etc.). This may be done in the context function or the template; wherever it makes the most sense.

Example:

>>> import jinja2
>>> 
>>> @jinja2.contextfunction
... def get_context(c):
...         return c
... 
>>> tmpl = """ 
... {% for key, value in context().items() %}
...     {% if not callable(value) %}
...         {{ key }}:{{ value }}
...     {% endif %}
... {% endfor %}
... """
>>> 
>>> template = jinja2.Template(tmpl)
>>> template.globals['context'] = get_context
>>> template.globals['callable'] = callable
>>>
>>> context = {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3}
>>> 
>>> print(template.render(**context))
        a:1
        c:3
        b:2

[Alternately, call render_response with ('home.htm', context=context) to make the other solution work.]


Here's how to get @crewbum's answer working from a Flask app:

import jinja2

@jinja2.contextfunction
def get_context(c):
    return c

app.jinja_env.globals['context'] = get_context
app.jinja_env.globals['callable'] = callable


I found @Garrett's answer to be a bit more complex than what I wanted. I found that I can easily inspect the context by adding a clone of the context to the context itself:

contextCopy = dict(context)
context['all'] = contextCopy

And then pretty printing that into my Jinja template with <pre>{{ all|pprint }}</pre>.

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