Standard HttpResponse objects are static structures. They are provided with a block of pre-rendered content at time of construction, and while that content can be modified, it isn’t in a form that makes it easy to perform modifications.
However, it can sometimes be beneficial to allow decorators or middleware to modify a response after it has been constructed by the view. For example, you may want to change the template that is used, or put additional data into the context.
TemplateResponse provides a way to do just that. Unlike basic HttpResponse objects, TemplateResponse objects retain the details of the template and context that was provided by the view to compute the response. The final output of the response is not computed until it is needed, later in the response process.
The name of the template to be rendered. Accepts a Template object, a path to a template or list of template paths.
Example: ['foo.html', 'path/to/bar.html']
The context data to be used when rendering the template. It can be a dictionary or a context object.
Example: {'foo': 123}
The current rendered value of the response content, using the current template and context data.
A boolean indicating whether the response content has been rendered.
Instantiates a SimpleTemplateResponse object with the given template, context, MIME type and HTTP status.
Converts context data into a context instance that can be used for rendering a template. Accepts a dictionary of context data or a context object. Returns a Context instance containing the provided data.
Override this method in order to customize context instantiation.
Resolves the template instance to use for rendering. Accepts a path of a template to use, or a sequence of template paths. Template instances may also be provided. Returns the Template instance to be rendered.
Override this method in order to customize template rendering.
Add a callback that will be invoked after rendering has taken place. This hook can be used to defer certain processing operations (such as caching) until after rendering has occurred.
If the SimpleTemplateResponse has already been rendered, the callback will be invoked immediately.
When called, callbacks will be passed a single argument – the rendered SimpleTemplateResponse instance.
If the callback returns a value that is not None, this will be used as the response instead of the original response object (and will be passed to the next post rendering callback etc.)
Sets response.content to the result obtained by SimpleTemplateResponse.rendered_content.
render() will only have an effect the first time it is called. On subsequent calls, it will return the result obtained from the first call.
TemplateResponse is a subclass of SimpleTemplateResponse that uses a RequestContext instead of a Context.
Instantiates an TemplateResponse object with the given template, context, MIME type and HTTP status.
Before a TemplateResponse instance can be returned to the client, it must be rendered. The rendering process takes the intermediate representation of template and context, and turns it into the final byte stream that can be served to the client.
There are three circumstances under which a TemplateResponse will be rendered:
A TemplateResponse can only be rendered once. The first call to SimpleTemplateResponse.render() sets the content of the response; subsequent rendering calls do not change the response content.
However, when response.content is explicitly assigned, the change is always applied. If you want to force the content to be re-rendered, you can re-evaluate the rendered content, and assign the content of the response manually:
# Set up a rendered TemplateResponse
>>> t = TemplateResponse(request, 'original.html', {})
>>> t.render()
>>> print t.content
Original content
# Re-rendering doesn't change content
>>> t.template_name = 'new.html'
>>> t.render()
>>> print t.content
Original content
# Assigning content does change, no render() call required
>>> t.content = t.rendered_content
>>> print t.content
New content
Some operations -- such as caching -- cannot be performed on an unrendered template. They must be performed on a fully complete and rendered response.
If you're using middleware, the solution is easy. Middleware provides multiple opportunities to process a response on exit from a view. If you put behavior in the Response middleware is guaranteed to execute after template rendering has taken place.
However, if you're using a decorator, the same opportunities do not exist. Any behavior defined in a decorator is handled immediately.
To compensate for this (and any other analogous use cases), TemplateResponse allows you to register callbacks that will be invoked when rendering has completed. Using this callback, you can defer critical processing until a point where you can guarantee that rendered content will be available.
To define a post-render callback, just define a function that takes a single argument -- response -- and register that function with the template response:
def my_render_callback(response):
# Do content-sensitive processing
do_post_processing()
def my_view(request):
# Create a response
response = TemplateResponse(request, 'mytemplate.html', {})
# Register the callback
response.add_post_render_callback(my_render_callback)
# Return the response
return response
my_render_callback() will be invoked after the mytemplate.html has been rendered, and will be provided the fully rendered TemplateResponse instance as an argument.
If the template has already been rendered, the callback will be invoked immediately.
A TemplateResponse object can be used anywhere that a normal HttpResponse can be used. It can also be used as an alternative to calling render_to_response().
For example, the following simple view returns a TemplateResponse() with a simple template, and a context containing a queryset:
from django.template.response import TemplateResponse
def blog_index(request):
return TemplateResponse(request, 'entry_list.html', {'entries': Entry.objects.all()})
Dec 26, 2011