I've a function in views.py which returns latitude and longitude:
return render(request, 'map.html', {'lat_lng':lat_lng})
and I am able to access it in html file as {{ lat_lng }} but when I try to use lat_lng in separate js file then I'm not able to access it.
I tried all below stack answers but none worked for me:
Django Template Variables and Javascript
Passing django variables to javascript
How to use Django variable in JavaScript file?
Passing Python Data to JavaScript via Django
You can take advantage of json_script template tag. In your template do this
{{ lat_lng|json_script:"lat_lng" }}
Then in your javascript file you can access this variable like
const lat_lng = JSON.parse(document.getElementById("lat_lng").textContent);
One simple way to do it is to append the following snippet at the top of your template html file(the one that imports your javascript file):
<script type="text/javascript">
const LAT_LNG = "{{ lat_lng }}"; // Or pass it through a function
</script>
when I try to use lat_lng in separate js file then I'm not able to access it.
You can't use a django template variable in a static file. The static files will be returned in a way that bypasses Django's typical request processing.
Instead, set the variables on data-* attributes on an known HTML element, then get the element, access the attribute and use the value that way.
Be sure when that getting the variable in a script tag is before including the separate js file
Exmple :
<script type="text/javascript">
var variable = "{{myV}}";
</script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="myJsFile.js"></script>
This is my code in Flask
data = {"Bird" : "Its a bird!"}
#app.route('/store')
def store():
return render_template('store.html', data = data)
This is my code in Javascript
<script>
var val = "Bird";
var something = '{{ data[' + val +'] }}';
</script>
I'm not sure what i'm doing wrong but I cant seem to get something to be "Its a bird!".
Any ideas?
You have to keep in mind that Jinja2 template rendering happens before the JavaScript is executed. You can see this in the fact that you render the template and then return it to the user (or their browser).
Therefore, anything that comes out of that template render process, must be valid JavaScript in order to run. Also, Jinja2 does not know anything about HTML, JavaScript or really any other language.
Putting this knowledge into use would basically mean that you need to render the required data into valid JavaScript:
<script>
var mapping = {{ data | tojson }};
var val = "Bird";
var something = mapping[val];
</script>
Personally, however, I would avoid templating JavaScript code and figure out some other way or handling dynamic data.
I am Using OctoberCMS which is based in Laravel Framework and I set variable in my html file
{% set name = 'Juan' %}
and i am trying to access it in my Javascript file by setting variable like this
var myName = '{{ name }}'
and i alert the variable myName but unfortunately it doesn't display the variable myName instead it displayed the whole string like this {{ name }}
The problem is you are defining whole thing in javascript
So, template engine has no clue what you want, what I suggest is just define variables in Html like this
so previously you did this.
{% set name = 'Juan' %}
so now to pass this variable to js you can do something like this for simplicity. [its unprofessional and I do not suggest it instead we can use our namespace/object and pass it]
<script>var myName = '{{ name }}';</script>
make sure this line is not written in js file it must be in one of .htm layout/template or in markup section.
then throughout in your project inside js you can access it.
alert(myName);
and if it do not seems relevant to you then we suggest you to post laravel code which can do stuff like this so we give better working relevant solution.
if you find any doubts please comment.
well javascript file does not support twig templating engine so it will not understand
what is {{ name }} variable.
but you can do a workaround over here like that
in your .htm twig file you can print the variable in a span and make it display:none
<span id="name" style="display: none;">{{ name }}</span>
and then call it into your js file like this
var name = document.getElementById("name").innerHTML
or if you jave jquery included then you can do like this
var name = $("#name").val()
I hope this help
I'm passing a dictionary from my Django view and want to access the dictionary in my code.
view code:
res.responses is a dictionary
def index(request):
import pprint
pprint.pprint(res.responses)
print 'type = ', type(res.responses)
return render_to_response("deploy/index.html", {"responses":res.responses})
Javascript code:
$(document).ready(function(){
//{% for each in responses%}
// console.log(Hi)
//{% endfor %}
var response = "{{responses}}"
console.log(response)
I tried accessing the variable directly using for loop and also accessing the variable directly. Both throw me an error. Please provide some suggestion.
You can do both.
Option 1:
Provide the script via a template that will send the code with the values. Will look ugly but work. Your javascript file or even the html must be parsed by the django template engine. They can't be static
Option 2:
Provide a new view with a json response, that is accessed from your javascript code (ie: via JQuery)
When I render a page using the Django template renderer, I can pass in a dictionary variable containing various values to manipulate them in the page using {{ myVar }}.
Is there a way to access the same variable in Javascript (perhaps using the DOM, I don't know how Django makes the variables accessible)? I want to be able to lookup details using an AJAX lookup based on the values contained in the variables passed in.
The {{variable}} is substituted directly into the HTML. Do a view source; it isn't a "variable" or anything like it. It's just rendered text.
Having said that, you can put this kind of substitution into your JavaScript.
<script type="text/javascript">
var a = "{{someDjangoVariable}}";
</script>
This gives you "dynamic" javascript.
CAUTION Check ticket #17419 for discussion on adding similar tag into Django core and possible XSS vulnerabilities introduced by using this template tag with user generated data. Comment from amacneil discusses most of the concerns raised in the ticket.
I think the most flexible and handy way of doing this is to define a template filter for variables you want to use in JS code. This allows you to ensure, that your data is properly escaped and you can use it with complex data structures, such as dict and list. That's why I write this answer despite there is an accepted answer with a lot of upvotes.
Here is an example of template filter:
// myapp/templatetags/js.py
from django.utils.safestring import mark_safe
from django.template import Library
import json
register = Library()
#register.filter(is_safe=True)
def js(obj):
return mark_safe(json.dumps(obj))
This template filters converts variable to JSON string. You can use it like so:
// myapp/templates/example.html
{% load js %}
<script type="text/javascript">
var someVar = {{ some_var | js }};
</script>
A solution that worked for me is using the hidden input field in the template
<input type="hidden" id="myVar" name="variable" value="{{ variable }}">
Then getting the value in javascript this way,
var myVar = document.getElementById("myVar").value;
As of Django 2.1, a new built in template tag has been introduced specifically for this use case: json_script.
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/stable/ref/templates/builtins/#json-script
The new tag will safely serialize template values and protects against XSS.
Django docs excerpt:
Safely outputs a Python object as JSON, wrapped in a tag,
ready for use with JavaScript.
There is a nice easy way implemented from Django 2.1+ using a built in template tag json_script. A quick example would be:
Declare your variable in your template:
{{ variable|json_script:'name' }}
And then call the variable in your <script> Javascript:
var js_variable = JSON.parse(document.getElementById('name').textContent);
It is possible that for more complex variables like 'User' you may get an error like "Object of type User is not JSON serializable" using Django's built in serializer. In this case you could make use of the Django Rest Framework to allow for more complex variables.
new docs says use {{ mydata|json_script:"mydata" }} to prevent code injection.
a good exmple is given here:
{{ mydata|json_script:"mydata" }}
<script>
const mydata = JSON.parse(document.getElementById('mydata').textContent);
</script>
For a JavaScript object stored in a Django field as text, which needs to again become a JavaScript object dynamically inserted into on-page script, you need to use both escapejs and JSON.parse():
var CropOpts = JSON.parse("{{ profile.last_crop_coords|escapejs }}");
Django's escapejs handles the quoting properly, and JSON.parse() converts the string back into a JS object.
Here is what I'm doing very easily:
I modified my base.html file for my template and put that at the bottom:
{% if DJdata %}
<script type="text/javascript">
(function () {window.DJdata = {{DJdata|safe}};})();
</script>
{% endif %}
then when I want to use a variable in the javascript files, I create a DJdata dictionary and I add it to the context by a json : context['DJdata'] = json.dumps(DJdata)
Hope it helps!
For a dictionary, you're best of encoding to JSON first. You can use simplejson.dumps() or if you want to convert from a data model in App Engine, you could use encode() from the GQLEncoder library.
Note, that if you want to pass a variable to an external .js script then you need to precede your script tag with another script tag that declares a global variable.
<script type="text/javascript">
var myVar = "{{ myVar }}"
</script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="{% static "scripts/my_script.js" %}"></script>
data is defined in the view as usual in the get_context_data
def get_context_data(self, *args, **kwargs):
context['myVar'] = True
return context
I was facing simillar issue and answer suggested by S.Lott worked for me.
<script type="text/javascript">
var a = "{{someDjangoVariable}}"
</script>
However I would like to point out major implementation limitation here.
If you are planning to put your javascript code in different file and include that file in your template. This won't work.
This works only when you main template and javascript code is in same file.
Probably django team can address this limitation.
I've been struggling with this too. On the surface it seems that the above solutions should work. However, the django architecture requires that each html file has its own rendered variables (that is, {{contact}} is rendered to contact.html, while {{posts}} goes to e.g. index.html and so on). On the other hand, <script> tags appear after the {%endblock%} in base.html from which contact.html and index.html inherit. This basically means that any solution including
<script type="text/javascript">
var myVar = "{{ myVar }}"
</script>
is bound to fail, because the variable and the script cannot co-exist in the same file.
The simple solution I eventually came up with, and worked for me, was to simply wrap the variable with a tag with id and later refer to it in the js file, like so:
// index.html
<div id="myvar">{{ myVar }}</div>
and then:
// somecode.js
var someVar = document.getElementById("myvar").innerHTML;
and just include <script src="static/js/somecode.js"></script> in base.html as usual.
Of course this is only about getting the content. Regarding security, just follow the other answers.
I have found we can pass Django variables to javascript functions like this:-
<button type="button" onclick="myJavascriptFunction('{{ my_django_variable }}')"></button>
<script>
myJavascriptFunction(djangoVariable){
alert(djangoVariable);
}
</script>
I use this way in Django 2.1 and work for me and this way is secure (reference):
Django side:
def age(request):
mydata = {'age':12}
return render(request, 'test.html', context={"mydata_json": json.dumps(mydata)})
Html side:
<script type='text/javascript'>
const mydata = {{ mydata_json|safe }};
console.log(mydata)
</script>
you can assemble the entire script where your array variable is declared in a string, as follows,
views.py
aaa = [41, 56, 25, 48, 72, 34, 12]
prueba = "<script>var data2 =["
for a in aaa:
aa = str(a)
prueba = prueba + "'" + aa + "',"
prueba = prueba + "];</script>"
that will generate a string as follows
prueba = "<script>var data2 =['41','56','25','48','72','34','12'];</script>"
after having this string, you must send it to the template
views.py
return render(request, 'example.html', {"prueba": prueba})
in the template you receive it and interpret it in a literary way as htm code, just before the javascript code where you need it, for example
template
{{ prueba|safe }}
and below that is the rest of your code, keep in mind that the variable to use in the example is data2
<script>
console.log(data2);
</script>
that way you will keep the type of data, which in this case is an arrangement
There are two things that worked for me inside Javascript:
'{{context_variable|escapejs }}'
and other:
In views.py
from json import dumps as jdumps
def func(request):
context={'message': jdumps('hello there')}
return render(request,'index.html',context)
and in the html:
{{ message|safe }}
There are various answers pointing to json_script. Contrary to what one might think, that's not a one size fits all solution.
For example, when we want to pass to JavaScript dynamic variables generated inside a for loop, it's best to use something like data-attributes.
See it in more detail here.
If you want to send variable directly to a function by passing it as a parameter then try this
<input type="text" onkeyup="somefunction('{{ YOUR_VARIABLE }}')">
As from previous answers the security can be improved upon