| # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- |
| """Built-in template filters used with the ``|`` operator.""" |
| import math |
| import random |
| import re |
| import warnings |
| from collections import namedtuple |
| from itertools import chain |
| from itertools import groupby |
| |
| from markupsafe import escape |
| from markupsafe import Markup |
| from markupsafe import soft_unicode |
| |
| from ._compat import abc |
| from ._compat import imap |
| from ._compat import iteritems |
| from ._compat import string_types |
| from ._compat import text_type |
| from .exceptions import FilterArgumentError |
| from .runtime import Undefined |
| from .utils import htmlsafe_json_dumps |
| from .utils import pformat |
| from .utils import unicode_urlencode |
| from .utils import urlize |
| |
| _word_re = re.compile(r"\w+", re.UNICODE) |
| _word_beginning_split_re = re.compile(r"([-\s\(\{\[\<]+)", re.UNICODE) |
| |
| |
| def contextfilter(f): |
| """Decorator for marking context dependent filters. The current |
| :class:`Context` will be passed as first argument. |
| """ |
| f.contextfilter = True |
| return f |
| |
| |
| def evalcontextfilter(f): |
| """Decorator for marking eval-context dependent filters. An eval |
| context object is passed as first argument. For more information |
| about the eval context, see :ref:`eval-context`. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 2.4 |
| """ |
| f.evalcontextfilter = True |
| return f |
| |
| |
| def environmentfilter(f): |
| """Decorator for marking environment dependent filters. The current |
| :class:`Environment` is passed to the filter as first argument. |
| """ |
| f.environmentfilter = True |
| return f |
| |
| |
| def ignore_case(value): |
| """For use as a postprocessor for :func:`make_attrgetter`. Converts strings |
| to lowercase and returns other types as-is.""" |
| return value.lower() if isinstance(value, string_types) else value |
| |
| |
| def make_attrgetter(environment, attribute, postprocess=None, default=None): |
| """Returns a callable that looks up the given attribute from a |
| passed object with the rules of the environment. Dots are allowed |
| to access attributes of attributes. Integer parts in paths are |
| looked up as integers. |
| """ |
| attribute = _prepare_attribute_parts(attribute) |
| |
| def attrgetter(item): |
| for part in attribute: |
| item = environment.getitem(item, part) |
| |
| if default and isinstance(item, Undefined): |
| item = default |
| |
| if postprocess is not None: |
| item = postprocess(item) |
| |
| return item |
| |
| return attrgetter |
| |
| |
| def make_multi_attrgetter(environment, attribute, postprocess=None): |
| """Returns a callable that looks up the given comma separated |
| attributes from a passed object with the rules of the environment. |
| Dots are allowed to access attributes of each attribute. Integer |
| parts in paths are looked up as integers. |
| |
| The value returned by the returned callable is a list of extracted |
| attribute values. |
| |
| Examples of attribute: "attr1,attr2", "attr1.inner1.0,attr2.inner2.0", etc. |
| """ |
| attribute_parts = ( |
| attribute.split(",") if isinstance(attribute, string_types) else [attribute] |
| ) |
| attribute = [ |
| _prepare_attribute_parts(attribute_part) for attribute_part in attribute_parts |
| ] |
| |
| def attrgetter(item): |
| items = [None] * len(attribute) |
| for i, attribute_part in enumerate(attribute): |
| item_i = item |
| for part in attribute_part: |
| item_i = environment.getitem(item_i, part) |
| |
| if postprocess is not None: |
| item_i = postprocess(item_i) |
| |
| items[i] = item_i |
| return items |
| |
| return attrgetter |
| |
| |
| def _prepare_attribute_parts(attr): |
| if attr is None: |
| return [] |
| elif isinstance(attr, string_types): |
| return [int(x) if x.isdigit() else x for x in attr.split(".")] |
| else: |
| return [attr] |
| |
| |
| def do_forceescape(value): |
| """Enforce HTML escaping. This will probably double escape variables.""" |
| if hasattr(value, "__html__"): |
| value = value.__html__() |
| return escape(text_type(value)) |
| |
| |
| def do_urlencode(value): |
| """Quote data for use in a URL path or query using UTF-8. |
| |
| Basic wrapper around :func:`urllib.parse.quote` when given a |
| string, or :func:`urllib.parse.urlencode` for a dict or iterable. |
| |
| :param value: Data to quote. A string will be quoted directly. A |
| dict or iterable of ``(key, value)`` pairs will be joined as a |
| query string. |
| |
| When given a string, "/" is not quoted. HTTP servers treat "/" and |
| "%2F" equivalently in paths. If you need quoted slashes, use the |
| ``|replace("/", "%2F")`` filter. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 2.7 |
| """ |
| if isinstance(value, string_types) or not isinstance(value, abc.Iterable): |
| return unicode_urlencode(value) |
| |
| if isinstance(value, dict): |
| items = iteritems(value) |
| else: |
| items = iter(value) |
| |
| return u"&".join( |
| "%s=%s" % (unicode_urlencode(k, for_qs=True), unicode_urlencode(v, for_qs=True)) |
| for k, v in items |
| ) |
| |
| |
| @evalcontextfilter |
| def do_replace(eval_ctx, s, old, new, count=None): |
| """Return a copy of the value with all occurrences of a substring |
| replaced with a new one. The first argument is the substring |
| that should be replaced, the second is the replacement string. |
| If the optional third argument ``count`` is given, only the first |
| ``count`` occurrences are replaced: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ "Hello World"|replace("Hello", "Goodbye") }} |
| -> Goodbye World |
| |
| {{ "aaaaargh"|replace("a", "d'oh, ", 2) }} |
| -> d'oh, d'oh, aaargh |
| """ |
| if count is None: |
| count = -1 |
| if not eval_ctx.autoescape: |
| return text_type(s).replace(text_type(old), text_type(new), count) |
| if ( |
| hasattr(old, "__html__") |
| or hasattr(new, "__html__") |
| and not hasattr(s, "__html__") |
| ): |
| s = escape(s) |
| else: |
| s = soft_unicode(s) |
| return s.replace(soft_unicode(old), soft_unicode(new), count) |
| |
| |
| def do_upper(s): |
| """Convert a value to uppercase.""" |
| return soft_unicode(s).upper() |
| |
| |
| def do_lower(s): |
| """Convert a value to lowercase.""" |
| return soft_unicode(s).lower() |
| |
| |
| @evalcontextfilter |
| def do_xmlattr(_eval_ctx, d, autospace=True): |
| """Create an SGML/XML attribute string based on the items in a dict. |
| All values that are neither `none` nor `undefined` are automatically |
| escaped: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: html+jinja |
| |
| <ul{{ {'class': 'my_list', 'missing': none, |
| 'id': 'list-%d'|format(variable)}|xmlattr }}> |
| ... |
| </ul> |
| |
| Results in something like this: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: html |
| |
| <ul class="my_list" id="list-42"> |
| ... |
| </ul> |
| |
| As you can see it automatically prepends a space in front of the item |
| if the filter returned something unless the second parameter is false. |
| """ |
| rv = u" ".join( |
| u'%s="%s"' % (escape(key), escape(value)) |
| for key, value in iteritems(d) |
| if value is not None and not isinstance(value, Undefined) |
| ) |
| if autospace and rv: |
| rv = u" " + rv |
| if _eval_ctx.autoescape: |
| rv = Markup(rv) |
| return rv |
| |
| |
| def do_capitalize(s): |
| """Capitalize a value. The first character will be uppercase, all others |
| lowercase. |
| """ |
| return soft_unicode(s).capitalize() |
| |
| |
| def do_title(s): |
| """Return a titlecased version of the value. I.e. words will start with |
| uppercase letters, all remaining characters are lowercase. |
| """ |
| return "".join( |
| [ |
| item[0].upper() + item[1:].lower() |
| for item in _word_beginning_split_re.split(soft_unicode(s)) |
| if item |
| ] |
| ) |
| |
| |
| def do_dictsort(value, case_sensitive=False, by="key", reverse=False): |
| """Sort a dict and yield (key, value) pairs. Because python dicts are |
| unsorted you may want to use this function to order them by either |
| key or value: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {% for key, value in mydict|dictsort %} |
| sort the dict by key, case insensitive |
| |
| {% for key, value in mydict|dictsort(reverse=true) %} |
| sort the dict by key, case insensitive, reverse order |
| |
| {% for key, value in mydict|dictsort(true) %} |
| sort the dict by key, case sensitive |
| |
| {% for key, value in mydict|dictsort(false, 'value') %} |
| sort the dict by value, case insensitive |
| """ |
| if by == "key": |
| pos = 0 |
| elif by == "value": |
| pos = 1 |
| else: |
| raise FilterArgumentError('You can only sort by either "key" or "value"') |
| |
| def sort_func(item): |
| value = item[pos] |
| |
| if not case_sensitive: |
| value = ignore_case(value) |
| |
| return value |
| |
| return sorted(value.items(), key=sort_func, reverse=reverse) |
| |
| |
| @environmentfilter |
| def do_sort(environment, value, reverse=False, case_sensitive=False, attribute=None): |
| """Sort an iterable using Python's :func:`sorted`. |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {% for city in cities|sort %} |
| ... |
| {% endfor %} |
| |
| :param reverse: Sort descending instead of ascending. |
| :param case_sensitive: When sorting strings, sort upper and lower |
| case separately. |
| :param attribute: When sorting objects or dicts, an attribute or |
| key to sort by. Can use dot notation like ``"address.city"``. |
| Can be a list of attributes like ``"age,name"``. |
| |
| The sort is stable, it does not change the relative order of |
| elements that compare equal. This makes it is possible to chain |
| sorts on different attributes and ordering. |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {% for user in users|sort(attribute="name") |
| |sort(reverse=true, attribute="age") %} |
| ... |
| {% endfor %} |
| |
| As a shortcut to chaining when the direction is the same for all |
| attributes, pass a comma separate list of attributes. |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {% for user users|sort(attribute="age,name") %} |
| ... |
| {% endfor %} |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.11.0 |
| The ``attribute`` parameter can be a comma separated list of |
| attributes, e.g. ``"age,name"``. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.6 |
| The ``attribute`` parameter was added. |
| """ |
| key_func = make_multi_attrgetter( |
| environment, attribute, postprocess=ignore_case if not case_sensitive else None |
| ) |
| return sorted(value, key=key_func, reverse=reverse) |
| |
| |
| @environmentfilter |
| def do_unique(environment, value, case_sensitive=False, attribute=None): |
| """Returns a list of unique items from the given iterable. |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ ['foo', 'bar', 'foobar', 'FooBar']|unique|list }} |
| -> ['foo', 'bar', 'foobar'] |
| |
| The unique items are yielded in the same order as their first occurrence in |
| the iterable passed to the filter. |
| |
| :param case_sensitive: Treat upper and lower case strings as distinct. |
| :param attribute: Filter objects with unique values for this attribute. |
| """ |
| getter = make_attrgetter( |
| environment, attribute, postprocess=ignore_case if not case_sensitive else None |
| ) |
| seen = set() |
| |
| for item in value: |
| key = getter(item) |
| |
| if key not in seen: |
| seen.add(key) |
| yield item |
| |
| |
| def _min_or_max(environment, value, func, case_sensitive, attribute): |
| it = iter(value) |
| |
| try: |
| first = next(it) |
| except StopIteration: |
| return environment.undefined("No aggregated item, sequence was empty.") |
| |
| key_func = make_attrgetter( |
| environment, attribute, postprocess=ignore_case if not case_sensitive else None |
| ) |
| return func(chain([first], it), key=key_func) |
| |
| |
| @environmentfilter |
| def do_min(environment, value, case_sensitive=False, attribute=None): |
| """Return the smallest item from the sequence. |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ [1, 2, 3]|min }} |
| -> 1 |
| |
| :param case_sensitive: Treat upper and lower case strings as distinct. |
| :param attribute: Get the object with the min value of this attribute. |
| """ |
| return _min_or_max(environment, value, min, case_sensitive, attribute) |
| |
| |
| @environmentfilter |
| def do_max(environment, value, case_sensitive=False, attribute=None): |
| """Return the largest item from the sequence. |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ [1, 2, 3]|max }} |
| -> 3 |
| |
| :param case_sensitive: Treat upper and lower case strings as distinct. |
| :param attribute: Get the object with the max value of this attribute. |
| """ |
| return _min_or_max(environment, value, max, case_sensitive, attribute) |
| |
| |
| def do_default(value, default_value=u"", boolean=False): |
| """If the value is undefined it will return the passed default value, |
| otherwise the value of the variable: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ my_variable|default('my_variable is not defined') }} |
| |
| This will output the value of ``my_variable`` if the variable was |
| defined, otherwise ``'my_variable is not defined'``. If you want |
| to use default with variables that evaluate to false you have to |
| set the second parameter to `true`: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ ''|default('the string was empty', true) }} |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.11 |
| It's now possible to configure the :class:`~jinja2.Environment` with |
| :class:`~jinja2.ChainableUndefined` to make the `default` filter work |
| on nested elements and attributes that may contain undefined values |
| in the chain without getting an :exc:`~jinja2.UndefinedError`. |
| """ |
| if isinstance(value, Undefined) or (boolean and not value): |
| return default_value |
| return value |
| |
| |
| @evalcontextfilter |
| def do_join(eval_ctx, value, d=u"", attribute=None): |
| """Return a string which is the concatenation of the strings in the |
| sequence. The separator between elements is an empty string per |
| default, you can define it with the optional parameter: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ [1, 2, 3]|join('|') }} |
| -> 1|2|3 |
| |
| {{ [1, 2, 3]|join }} |
| -> 123 |
| |
| It is also possible to join certain attributes of an object: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ users|join(', ', attribute='username') }} |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 2.6 |
| The `attribute` parameter was added. |
| """ |
| if attribute is not None: |
| value = imap(make_attrgetter(eval_ctx.environment, attribute), value) |
| |
| # no automatic escaping? joining is a lot easier then |
| if not eval_ctx.autoescape: |
| return text_type(d).join(imap(text_type, value)) |
| |
| # if the delimiter doesn't have an html representation we check |
| # if any of the items has. If yes we do a coercion to Markup |
| if not hasattr(d, "__html__"): |
| value = list(value) |
| do_escape = False |
| for idx, item in enumerate(value): |
| if hasattr(item, "__html__"): |
| do_escape = True |
| else: |
| value[idx] = text_type(item) |
| if do_escape: |
| d = escape(d) |
| else: |
| d = text_type(d) |
| return d.join(value) |
| |
| # no html involved, to normal joining |
| return soft_unicode(d).join(imap(soft_unicode, value)) |
| |
| |
| def do_center(value, width=80): |
| """Centers the value in a field of a given width.""" |
| return text_type(value).center(width) |
| |
| |
| @environmentfilter |
| def do_first(environment, seq): |
| """Return the first item of a sequence.""" |
| try: |
| return next(iter(seq)) |
| except StopIteration: |
| return environment.undefined("No first item, sequence was empty.") |
| |
| |
| @environmentfilter |
| def do_last(environment, seq): |
| """ |
| Return the last item of a sequence. |
| |
| Note: Does not work with generators. You may want to explicitly |
| convert it to a list: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ data | selectattr('name', '==', 'Jinja') | list | last }} |
| """ |
| try: |
| return next(iter(reversed(seq))) |
| except StopIteration: |
| return environment.undefined("No last item, sequence was empty.") |
| |
| |
| @contextfilter |
| def do_random(context, seq): |
| """Return a random item from the sequence.""" |
| try: |
| return random.choice(seq) |
| except IndexError: |
| return context.environment.undefined("No random item, sequence was empty.") |
| |
| |
| def do_filesizeformat(value, binary=False): |
| """Format the value like a 'human-readable' file size (i.e. 13 kB, |
| 4.1 MB, 102 Bytes, etc). Per default decimal prefixes are used (Mega, |
| Giga, etc.), if the second parameter is set to `True` the binary |
| prefixes are used (Mebi, Gibi). |
| """ |
| bytes = float(value) |
| base = binary and 1024 or 1000 |
| prefixes = [ |
| (binary and "KiB" or "kB"), |
| (binary and "MiB" or "MB"), |
| (binary and "GiB" or "GB"), |
| (binary and "TiB" or "TB"), |
| (binary and "PiB" or "PB"), |
| (binary and "EiB" or "EB"), |
| (binary and "ZiB" or "ZB"), |
| (binary and "YiB" or "YB"), |
| ] |
| if bytes == 1: |
| return "1 Byte" |
| elif bytes < base: |
| return "%d Bytes" % bytes |
| else: |
| for i, prefix in enumerate(prefixes): |
| unit = base ** (i + 2) |
| if bytes < unit: |
| return "%.1f %s" % ((base * bytes / unit), prefix) |
| return "%.1f %s" % ((base * bytes / unit), prefix) |
| |
| |
| def do_pprint(value, verbose=False): |
| """Pretty print a variable. Useful for debugging. |
| |
| With Jinja 1.2 onwards you can pass it a parameter. If this parameter |
| is truthy the output will be more verbose (this requires `pretty`) |
| """ |
| return pformat(value, verbose=verbose) |
| |
| |
| @evalcontextfilter |
| def do_urlize( |
| eval_ctx, value, trim_url_limit=None, nofollow=False, target=None, rel=None |
| ): |
| """Converts URLs in plain text into clickable links. |
| |
| If you pass the filter an additional integer it will shorten the urls |
| to that number. Also a third argument exists that makes the urls |
| "nofollow": |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ mytext|urlize(40, true) }} |
| links are shortened to 40 chars and defined with rel="nofollow" |
| |
| If *target* is specified, the ``target`` attribute will be added to the |
| ``<a>`` tag: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ mytext|urlize(40, target='_blank') }} |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.8+ |
| The *target* parameter was added. |
| """ |
| policies = eval_ctx.environment.policies |
| rel = set((rel or "").split() or []) |
| if nofollow: |
| rel.add("nofollow") |
| rel.update((policies["urlize.rel"] or "").split()) |
| if target is None: |
| target = policies["urlize.target"] |
| rel = " ".join(sorted(rel)) or None |
| rv = urlize(value, trim_url_limit, rel=rel, target=target) |
| if eval_ctx.autoescape: |
| rv = Markup(rv) |
| return rv |
| |
| |
| def do_indent(s, width=4, first=False, blank=False, indentfirst=None): |
| """Return a copy of the string with each line indented by 4 spaces. The |
| first line and blank lines are not indented by default. |
| |
| :param width: Number of spaces to indent by. |
| :param first: Don't skip indenting the first line. |
| :param blank: Don't skip indenting empty lines. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.10 |
| Blank lines are not indented by default. |
| |
| Rename the ``indentfirst`` argument to ``first``. |
| """ |
| if indentfirst is not None: |
| warnings.warn( |
| "The 'indentfirst' argument is renamed to 'first' and will" |
| " be removed in version 3.0.", |
| DeprecationWarning, |
| stacklevel=2, |
| ) |
| first = indentfirst |
| |
| indention = u" " * width |
| newline = u"\n" |
| |
| if isinstance(s, Markup): |
| indention = Markup(indention) |
| newline = Markup(newline) |
| |
| s += newline # this quirk is necessary for splitlines method |
| |
| if blank: |
| rv = (newline + indention).join(s.splitlines()) |
| else: |
| lines = s.splitlines() |
| rv = lines.pop(0) |
| |
| if lines: |
| rv += newline + newline.join( |
| indention + line if line else line for line in lines |
| ) |
| |
| if first: |
| rv = indention + rv |
| |
| return rv |
| |
| |
| @environmentfilter |
| def do_truncate(env, s, length=255, killwords=False, end="...", leeway=None): |
| """Return a truncated copy of the string. The length is specified |
| with the first parameter which defaults to ``255``. If the second |
| parameter is ``true`` the filter will cut the text at length. Otherwise |
| it will discard the last word. If the text was in fact |
| truncated it will append an ellipsis sign (``"..."``). If you want a |
| different ellipsis sign than ``"..."`` you can specify it using the |
| third parameter. Strings that only exceed the length by the tolerance |
| margin given in the fourth parameter will not be truncated. |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ "foo bar baz qux"|truncate(9) }} |
| -> "foo..." |
| {{ "foo bar baz qux"|truncate(9, True) }} |
| -> "foo ba..." |
| {{ "foo bar baz qux"|truncate(11) }} |
| -> "foo bar baz qux" |
| {{ "foo bar baz qux"|truncate(11, False, '...', 0) }} |
| -> "foo bar..." |
| |
| The default leeway on newer Jinja versions is 5 and was 0 before but |
| can be reconfigured globally. |
| """ |
| if leeway is None: |
| leeway = env.policies["truncate.leeway"] |
| assert length >= len(end), "expected length >= %s, got %s" % (len(end), length) |
| assert leeway >= 0, "expected leeway >= 0, got %s" % leeway |
| if len(s) <= length + leeway: |
| return s |
| if killwords: |
| return s[: length - len(end)] + end |
| result = s[: length - len(end)].rsplit(" ", 1)[0] |
| return result + end |
| |
| |
| @environmentfilter |
| def do_wordwrap( |
| environment, |
| s, |
| width=79, |
| break_long_words=True, |
| wrapstring=None, |
| break_on_hyphens=True, |
| ): |
| """Wrap a string to the given width. Existing newlines are treated |
| as paragraphs to be wrapped separately. |
| |
| :param s: Original text to wrap. |
| :param width: Maximum length of wrapped lines. |
| :param break_long_words: If a word is longer than ``width``, break |
| it across lines. |
| :param break_on_hyphens: If a word contains hyphens, it may be split |
| across lines. |
| :param wrapstring: String to join each wrapped line. Defaults to |
| :attr:`Environment.newline_sequence`. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.11 |
| Existing newlines are treated as paragraphs wrapped separately. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.11 |
| Added the ``break_on_hyphens`` parameter. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.7 |
| Added the ``wrapstring`` parameter. |
| """ |
| |
| import textwrap |
| |
| if not wrapstring: |
| wrapstring = environment.newline_sequence |
| |
| # textwrap.wrap doesn't consider existing newlines when wrapping. |
| # If the string has a newline before width, wrap will still insert |
| # a newline at width, resulting in a short line. Instead, split and |
| # wrap each paragraph individually. |
| return wrapstring.join( |
| [ |
| wrapstring.join( |
| textwrap.wrap( |
| line, |
| width=width, |
| expand_tabs=False, |
| replace_whitespace=False, |
| break_long_words=break_long_words, |
| break_on_hyphens=break_on_hyphens, |
| ) |
| ) |
| for line in s.splitlines() |
| ] |
| ) |
| |
| |
| def do_wordcount(s): |
| """Count the words in that string.""" |
| return len(_word_re.findall(soft_unicode(s))) |
| |
| |
| def do_int(value, default=0, base=10): |
| """Convert the value into an integer. If the |
| conversion doesn't work it will return ``0``. You can |
| override this default using the first parameter. You |
| can also override the default base (10) in the second |
| parameter, which handles input with prefixes such as |
| 0b, 0o and 0x for bases 2, 8 and 16 respectively. |
| The base is ignored for decimal numbers and non-string values. |
| """ |
| try: |
| if isinstance(value, string_types): |
| return int(value, base) |
| return int(value) |
| except (TypeError, ValueError): |
| # this quirk is necessary so that "42.23"|int gives 42. |
| try: |
| return int(float(value)) |
| except (TypeError, ValueError): |
| return default |
| |
| |
| def do_float(value, default=0.0): |
| """Convert the value into a floating point number. If the |
| conversion doesn't work it will return ``0.0``. You can |
| override this default using the first parameter. |
| """ |
| try: |
| return float(value) |
| except (TypeError, ValueError): |
| return default |
| |
| |
| def do_format(value, *args, **kwargs): |
| """Apply the given values to a `printf-style`_ format string, like |
| ``string % values``. |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ "%s, %s!"|format(greeting, name) }} |
| Hello, World! |
| |
| In most cases it should be more convenient and efficient to use the |
| ``%`` operator or :meth:`str.format`. |
| |
| .. code-block:: text |
| |
| {{ "%s, %s!" % (greeting, name) }} |
| {{ "{}, {}!".format(greeting, name) }} |
| |
| .. _printf-style: https://docs.python.org/library/stdtypes.html |
| #printf-style-string-formatting |
| """ |
| if args and kwargs: |
| raise FilterArgumentError( |
| "can't handle positional and keyword arguments at the same time" |
| ) |
| return soft_unicode(value) % (kwargs or args) |
| |
| |
| def do_trim(value, chars=None): |
| """Strip leading and trailing characters, by default whitespace.""" |
| return soft_unicode(value).strip(chars) |
| |
| |
| def do_striptags(value): |
| """Strip SGML/XML tags and replace adjacent whitespace by one space.""" |
| if hasattr(value, "__html__"): |
| value = value.__html__() |
| return Markup(text_type(value)).striptags() |
| |
| |
| def do_slice(value, slices, fill_with=None): |
| """Slice an iterator and return a list of lists containing |
| those items. Useful if you want to create a div containing |
| three ul tags that represent columns: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: html+jinja |
| |
| <div class="columnwrapper"> |
| {%- for column in items|slice(3) %} |
| <ul class="column-{{ loop.index }}"> |
| {%- for item in column %} |
| <li>{{ item }}</li> |
| {%- endfor %} |
| </ul> |
| {%- endfor %} |
| </div> |
| |
| If you pass it a second argument it's used to fill missing |
| values on the last iteration. |
| """ |
| seq = list(value) |
| length = len(seq) |
| items_per_slice = length // slices |
| slices_with_extra = length % slices |
| offset = 0 |
| for slice_number in range(slices): |
| start = offset + slice_number * items_per_slice |
| if slice_number < slices_with_extra: |
| offset += 1 |
| end = offset + (slice_number + 1) * items_per_slice |
| tmp = seq[start:end] |
| if fill_with is not None and slice_number >= slices_with_extra: |
| tmp.append(fill_with) |
| yield tmp |
| |
| |
| def do_batch(value, linecount, fill_with=None): |
| """ |
| A filter that batches items. It works pretty much like `slice` |
| just the other way round. It returns a list of lists with the |
| given number of items. If you provide a second parameter this |
| is used to fill up missing items. See this example: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: html+jinja |
| |
| <table> |
| {%- for row in items|batch(3, ' ') %} |
| <tr> |
| {%- for column in row %} |
| <td>{{ column }}</td> |
| {%- endfor %} |
| </tr> |
| {%- endfor %} |
| </table> |
| """ |
| tmp = [] |
| for item in value: |
| if len(tmp) == linecount: |
| yield tmp |
| tmp = [] |
| tmp.append(item) |
| if tmp: |
| if fill_with is not None and len(tmp) < linecount: |
| tmp += [fill_with] * (linecount - len(tmp)) |
| yield tmp |
| |
| |
| def do_round(value, precision=0, method="common"): |
| """Round the number to a given precision. The first |
| parameter specifies the precision (default is ``0``), the |
| second the rounding method: |
| |
| - ``'common'`` rounds either up or down |
| - ``'ceil'`` always rounds up |
| - ``'floor'`` always rounds down |
| |
| If you don't specify a method ``'common'`` is used. |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ 42.55|round }} |
| -> 43.0 |
| {{ 42.55|round(1, 'floor') }} |
| -> 42.5 |
| |
| Note that even if rounded to 0 precision, a float is returned. If |
| you need a real integer, pipe it through `int`: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ 42.55|round|int }} |
| -> 43 |
| """ |
| if method not in {"common", "ceil", "floor"}: |
| raise FilterArgumentError("method must be common, ceil or floor") |
| if method == "common": |
| return round(value, precision) |
| func = getattr(math, method) |
| return func(value * (10 ** precision)) / (10 ** precision) |
| |
| |
| # Use a regular tuple repr here. This is what we did in the past and we |
| # really want to hide this custom type as much as possible. In particular |
| # we do not want to accidentally expose an auto generated repr in case |
| # people start to print this out in comments or something similar for |
| # debugging. |
| _GroupTuple = namedtuple("_GroupTuple", ["grouper", "list"]) |
| _GroupTuple.__repr__ = tuple.__repr__ |
| _GroupTuple.__str__ = tuple.__str__ |
| |
| |
| @environmentfilter |
| def do_groupby(environment, value, attribute): |
| """Group a sequence of objects by an attribute using Python's |
| :func:`itertools.groupby`. The attribute can use dot notation for |
| nested access, like ``"address.city"``. Unlike Python's ``groupby``, |
| the values are sorted first so only one group is returned for each |
| unique value. |
| |
| For example, a list of ``User`` objects with a ``city`` attribute |
| can be rendered in groups. In this example, ``grouper`` refers to |
| the ``city`` value of the group. |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: html+jinja |
| |
| <ul>{% for city, items in users|groupby("city") %} |
| <li>{{ city }} |
| <ul>{% for user in items %} |
| <li>{{ user.name }} |
| {% endfor %}</ul> |
| </li> |
| {% endfor %}</ul> |
| |
| ``groupby`` yields namedtuples of ``(grouper, list)``, which |
| can be used instead of the tuple unpacking above. ``grouper`` is the |
| value of the attribute, and ``list`` is the items with that value. |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: html+jinja |
| |
| <ul>{% for group in users|groupby("city") %} |
| <li>{{ group.grouper }}: {{ group.list|join(", ") }} |
| {% endfor %}</ul> |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.6 |
| The attribute supports dot notation for nested access. |
| """ |
| expr = make_attrgetter(environment, attribute) |
| return [ |
| _GroupTuple(key, list(values)) |
| for key, values in groupby(sorted(value, key=expr), expr) |
| ] |
| |
| |
| @environmentfilter |
| def do_sum(environment, iterable, attribute=None, start=0): |
| """Returns the sum of a sequence of numbers plus the value of parameter |
| 'start' (which defaults to 0). When the sequence is empty it returns |
| start. |
| |
| It is also possible to sum up only certain attributes: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| Total: {{ items|sum(attribute='price') }} |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.6 |
| The `attribute` parameter was added to allow suming up over |
| attributes. Also the `start` parameter was moved on to the right. |
| """ |
| if attribute is not None: |
| iterable = imap(make_attrgetter(environment, attribute), iterable) |
| return sum(iterable, start) |
| |
| |
| def do_list(value): |
| """Convert the value into a list. If it was a string the returned list |
| will be a list of characters. |
| """ |
| return list(value) |
| |
| |
| def do_mark_safe(value): |
| """Mark the value as safe which means that in an environment with automatic |
| escaping enabled this variable will not be escaped. |
| """ |
| return Markup(value) |
| |
| |
| def do_mark_unsafe(value): |
| """Mark a value as unsafe. This is the reverse operation for :func:`safe`.""" |
| return text_type(value) |
| |
| |
| def do_reverse(value): |
| """Reverse the object or return an iterator that iterates over it the other |
| way round. |
| """ |
| if isinstance(value, string_types): |
| return value[::-1] |
| try: |
| return reversed(value) |
| except TypeError: |
| try: |
| rv = list(value) |
| rv.reverse() |
| return rv |
| except TypeError: |
| raise FilterArgumentError("argument must be iterable") |
| |
| |
| @environmentfilter |
| def do_attr(environment, obj, name): |
| """Get an attribute of an object. ``foo|attr("bar")`` works like |
| ``foo.bar`` just that always an attribute is returned and items are not |
| looked up. |
| |
| See :ref:`Notes on subscriptions <notes-on-subscriptions>` for more details. |
| """ |
| try: |
| name = str(name) |
| except UnicodeError: |
| pass |
| else: |
| try: |
| value = getattr(obj, name) |
| except AttributeError: |
| pass |
| else: |
| if environment.sandboxed and not environment.is_safe_attribute( |
| obj, name, value |
| ): |
| return environment.unsafe_undefined(obj, name) |
| return value |
| return environment.undefined(obj=obj, name=name) |
| |
| |
| @contextfilter |
| def do_map(*args, **kwargs): |
| """Applies a filter on a sequence of objects or looks up an attribute. |
| This is useful when dealing with lists of objects but you are really |
| only interested in a certain value of it. |
| |
| The basic usage is mapping on an attribute. Imagine you have a list |
| of users but you are only interested in a list of usernames: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| Users on this page: {{ users|map(attribute='username')|join(', ') }} |
| |
| You can specify a ``default`` value to use if an object in the list |
| does not have the given attribute. |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ users|map(attribute="username", default="Anonymous")|join(", ") }} |
| |
| Alternatively you can let it invoke a filter by passing the name of the |
| filter and the arguments afterwards. A good example would be applying a |
| text conversion filter on a sequence: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| Users on this page: {{ titles|map('lower')|join(', ') }} |
| |
| Similar to a generator comprehension such as: |
| |
| .. code-block:: python |
| |
| (u.username for u in users) |
| (u.username or "Anonymous" for u in users) |
| (do_lower(x) for x in titles) |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 2.11.0 |
| Added the ``default`` parameter. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 2.7 |
| """ |
| seq, func = prepare_map(args, kwargs) |
| if seq: |
| for item in seq: |
| yield func(item) |
| |
| |
| @contextfilter |
| def do_select(*args, **kwargs): |
| """Filters a sequence of objects by applying a test to each object, |
| and only selecting the objects with the test succeeding. |
| |
| If no test is specified, each object will be evaluated as a boolean. |
| |
| Example usage: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ numbers|select("odd") }} |
| {{ numbers|select("odd") }} |
| {{ numbers|select("divisibleby", 3) }} |
| {{ numbers|select("lessthan", 42) }} |
| {{ strings|select("equalto", "mystring") }} |
| |
| Similar to a generator comprehension such as: |
| |
| .. code-block:: python |
| |
| (n for n in numbers if test_odd(n)) |
| (n for n in numbers if test_divisibleby(n, 3)) |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 2.7 |
| """ |
| return select_or_reject(args, kwargs, lambda x: x, False) |
| |
| |
| @contextfilter |
| def do_reject(*args, **kwargs): |
| """Filters a sequence of objects by applying a test to each object, |
| and rejecting the objects with the test succeeding. |
| |
| If no test is specified, each object will be evaluated as a boolean. |
| |
| Example usage: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ numbers|reject("odd") }} |
| |
| Similar to a generator comprehension such as: |
| |
| .. code-block:: python |
| |
| (n for n in numbers if not test_odd(n)) |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 2.7 |
| """ |
| return select_or_reject(args, kwargs, lambda x: not x, False) |
| |
| |
| @contextfilter |
| def do_selectattr(*args, **kwargs): |
| """Filters a sequence of objects by applying a test to the specified |
| attribute of each object, and only selecting the objects with the |
| test succeeding. |
| |
| If no test is specified, the attribute's value will be evaluated as |
| a boolean. |
| |
| Example usage: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ users|selectattr("is_active") }} |
| {{ users|selectattr("email", "none") }} |
| |
| Similar to a generator comprehension such as: |
| |
| .. code-block:: python |
| |
| (u for user in users if user.is_active) |
| (u for user in users if test_none(user.email)) |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 2.7 |
| """ |
| return select_or_reject(args, kwargs, lambda x: x, True) |
| |
| |
| @contextfilter |
| def do_rejectattr(*args, **kwargs): |
| """Filters a sequence of objects by applying a test to the specified |
| attribute of each object, and rejecting the objects with the test |
| succeeding. |
| |
| If no test is specified, the attribute's value will be evaluated as |
| a boolean. |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: jinja |
| |
| {{ users|rejectattr("is_active") }} |
| {{ users|rejectattr("email", "none") }} |
| |
| Similar to a generator comprehension such as: |
| |
| .. code-block:: python |
| |
| (u for user in users if not user.is_active) |
| (u for user in users if not test_none(user.email)) |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 2.7 |
| """ |
| return select_or_reject(args, kwargs, lambda x: not x, True) |
| |
| |
| @evalcontextfilter |
| def do_tojson(eval_ctx, value, indent=None): |
| """Dumps a structure to JSON so that it's safe to use in ``<script>`` |
| tags. It accepts the same arguments and returns a JSON string. Note that |
| this is available in templates through the ``|tojson`` filter which will |
| also mark the result as safe. Due to how this function escapes certain |
| characters this is safe even if used outside of ``<script>`` tags. |
| |
| The following characters are escaped in strings: |
| |
| - ``<`` |
| - ``>`` |
| - ``&`` |
| - ``'`` |
| |
| This makes it safe to embed such strings in any place in HTML with the |
| notable exception of double quoted attributes. In that case single |
| quote your attributes or HTML escape it in addition. |
| |
| The indent parameter can be used to enable pretty printing. Set it to |
| the number of spaces that the structures should be indented with. |
| |
| Note that this filter is for use in HTML contexts only. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 2.9 |
| """ |
| policies = eval_ctx.environment.policies |
| dumper = policies["json.dumps_function"] |
| options = policies["json.dumps_kwargs"] |
| if indent is not None: |
| options = dict(options) |
| options["indent"] = indent |
| return htmlsafe_json_dumps(value, dumper=dumper, **options) |
| |
| |
| def prepare_map(args, kwargs): |
| context = args[0] |
| seq = args[1] |
| default = None |
| |
| if len(args) == 2 and "attribute" in kwargs: |
| attribute = kwargs.pop("attribute") |
| default = kwargs.pop("default", None) |
| if kwargs: |
| raise FilterArgumentError( |
| "Unexpected keyword argument %r" % next(iter(kwargs)) |
| ) |
| func = make_attrgetter(context.environment, attribute, default=default) |
| else: |
| try: |
| name = args[2] |
| args = args[3:] |
| except LookupError: |
| raise FilterArgumentError("map requires a filter argument") |
| |
| def func(item): |
| return context.environment.call_filter( |
| name, item, args, kwargs, context=context |
| ) |
| |
| return seq, func |
| |
| |
| def prepare_select_or_reject(args, kwargs, modfunc, lookup_attr): |
| context = args[0] |
| seq = args[1] |
| if lookup_attr: |
| try: |
| attr = args[2] |
| except LookupError: |
| raise FilterArgumentError("Missing parameter for attribute name") |
| transfunc = make_attrgetter(context.environment, attr) |
| off = 1 |
| else: |
| off = 0 |
| |
| def transfunc(x): |
| return x |
| |
| try: |
| name = args[2 + off] |
| args = args[3 + off :] |
| |
| def func(item): |
| return context.environment.call_test(name, item, args, kwargs) |
| |
| except LookupError: |
| func = bool |
| |
| return seq, lambda item: modfunc(func(transfunc(item))) |
| |
| |
| def select_or_reject(args, kwargs, modfunc, lookup_attr): |
| seq, func = prepare_select_or_reject(args, kwargs, modfunc, lookup_attr) |
| if seq: |
| for item in seq: |
| if func(item): |
| yield item |
| |
| |
| FILTERS = { |
| "abs": abs, |
| "attr": do_attr, |
| "batch": do_batch, |
| "capitalize": do_capitalize, |
| "center": do_center, |
| "count": len, |
| "d": do_default, |
| "default": do_default, |
| "dictsort": do_dictsort, |
| "e": escape, |
| "escape": escape, |
| "filesizeformat": do_filesizeformat, |
| "first": do_first, |
| "float": do_float, |
| "forceescape": do_forceescape, |
| "format": do_format, |
| "groupby": do_groupby, |
| "indent": do_indent, |
| "int": do_int, |
| "join": do_join, |
| "last": do_last, |
| "length": len, |
| "list": do_list, |
| "lower": do_lower, |
| "map": do_map, |
| "min": do_min, |
| "max": do_max, |
| "pprint": do_pprint, |
| "random": do_random, |
| "reject": do_reject, |
| "rejectattr": do_rejectattr, |
| "replace": do_replace, |
| "reverse": do_reverse, |
| "round": do_round, |
| "safe": do_mark_safe, |
| "select": do_select, |
| "selectattr": do_selectattr, |
| "slice": do_slice, |
| "sort": do_sort, |
| "string": soft_unicode, |
| "striptags": do_striptags, |
| "sum": do_sum, |
| "title": do_title, |
| "trim": do_trim, |
| "truncate": do_truncate, |
| "unique": do_unique, |
| "upper": do_upper, |
| "urlencode": do_urlencode, |
| "urlize": do_urlize, |
| "wordcount": do_wordcount, |
| "wordwrap": do_wordwrap, |
| "xmlattr": do_xmlattr, |
| "tojson": do_tojson, |
| } |