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114 lines
6.2 KiB
ReStructuredText
114 lines
6.2 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _boundblocks_and_values:
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About StreamField BoundBlocks and values
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----------------------------------------
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All StreamField block types accept a ``template`` parameter to determine how they will be rendered on a page. However, for blocks that handle basic Python data types, such as ``CharBlock`` and ``IntegerBlock``, there are some limitations on where the template will take effect, since those built-in types (``str``, ``int`` and so on) cannot be 'taught' about their template rendering. As an example of this, consider the following block definition:
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.. code-block:: python
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class HeadingBlock(blocks.CharBlock):
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class Meta:
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template = 'blocks/heading.html'
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where ``blocks/heading.html`` consists of:
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.. code-block:: html+django
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<h1>{{ value }}</h1>
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This gives us a block that behaves as an ordinary text field, but wraps its output in ``<h1>`` tags whenever it is rendered:
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.. code-block:: python
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class BlogPage(Page):
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body = StreamField([
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# ...
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('heading', HeadingBlock()),
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# ...
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])
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.. code-block:: html+django
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{% load wagtailcore_tags %}
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{% for block in page.body %}
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{% if block.block_type == 'heading' %}
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{% include_block block %} {# This block will output its own <h1>...</h1> tags. #}
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{% endif %}
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{% endfor %}
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This kind of arrangement - a value that supposedly represents a plain text string, but has its own custom HTML representation when output on a template - would normally be a very messy thing to achieve in Python, but it works here because the items you get when iterating over a StreamField are not actually the 'native' values of the blocks. Instead, each item is returned as an instance of ``BoundBlock`` - an object that represents the pairing of a value and its block definition. By keeping track of the block definition, a ``BoundBlock`` always knows which template to render. To get to the underlying value - in this case, the text content of the heading - you would need to access ``block.value``. Indeed, if you were to output ``{% include_block block.value %}`` on the page, you would find that it renders as plain text, without the ``<h1>`` tags.
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(More precisely, the items returned when iterating over a StreamField are instances of a class ``StreamChild``, which provides the ``block_type`` property as well as ``value``.)
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Experienced Django developers may find it helpful to compare this to the ``BoundField`` class in Django's forms framework, which represents the pairing of a form field value with its corresponding form field definition, and therefore knows how to render the value as an HTML form field.
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Most of the time, you won't need to worry about these internal details; Wagtail will use the template rendering wherever you would expect it to. However, there are certain cases where the illusion isn't quite complete - namely, when accessing children of a ``ListBlock`` or ``StructBlock``. In these cases, there is no ``BoundBlock`` wrapper, and so the item cannot be relied upon to know its own template rendering. For example, consider the following setup, where our ``HeadingBlock`` is a child of a StructBlock:
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.. code-block:: python
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class EventBlock(blocks.StructBlock):
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heading = HeadingBlock()
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description = blocks.TextBlock()
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# ...
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class Meta:
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template = 'blocks/event.html'
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In ``blocks/event.html``:
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.. code-block:: html+django
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{% load wagtailcore_tags %}
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<div class="event {% if value.heading == 'Party!' %}lots-of-balloons{% endif %}">
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{% include_block value.heading %}
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- {% include_block value.description %}
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</div>
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In this case, ``value.heading`` returns the plain string value rather than a ``BoundBlock``; this is necessary because otherwise the comparison in ``{% if value.heading == 'Party!' %}`` would never succeed. This in turn means that ``{% include_block value.heading %}`` renders as the plain string, without the ``<h1>`` tags. To get the HTML rendering, you need to explicitly access the ``BoundBlock`` instance through ``value.bound_blocks.heading``:
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.. code-block:: html+django
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{% load wagtailcore_tags %}
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<div class="event {% if value.heading == 'Party!' %}lots-of-balloons{% endif %}">
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{% include_block value.bound_blocks.heading %}
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- {% include_block value.description %}
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</div>
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In practice, it would probably be more natural and readable to make the ``<h1>`` tag explicit in the EventBlock's template:
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.. code-block:: html+django
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{% load wagtailcore_tags %}
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<div class="event {% if value.heading == 'Party!' %}lots-of-balloons{% endif %}">
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<h1>{{ value.heading }}</h1>
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- {% include_block value.description %}
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</div>
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This limitation does not apply to StructBlock and StreamBlock values as children of a StructBlock, because Wagtail implements these as complex objects that know their own template rendering, even when not wrapped in a ``BoundBlock``. For example, if a StructBlock is nested in another StructBlock, as in:
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.. code-block:: python
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class EventBlock(blocks.StructBlock):
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heading = HeadingBlock()
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description = blocks.TextBlock()
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guest_speaker = blocks.StructBlock([
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('first_name', blocks.CharBlock()),
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('surname', blocks.CharBlock()),
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('photo', ImageChooserBlock()),
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], template='blocks/speaker.html')
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then ``{% include_block value.guest_speaker %}`` within the EventBlock's template will pick up the template rendering from ``blocks/speaker.html`` as intended.
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In summary, interactions between BoundBlocks and plain values work according to the following rules:
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1. When iterating over the value of a StreamField or StreamBlock (as in ``{% for block in page.body %}``), you will get back a sequence of BoundBlocks.
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2. If you have a BoundBlock instance, you can access the plain value as ``block.value``.
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3. Accessing a child of a StructBlock (as in ``value.heading``) will return a plain value; to retrieve the BoundBlock instead, use ``value.bound_blocks.heading``.
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4. The value of a ListBlock is a plain Python list; iterating over it returns plain child values.
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5. StructBlock and StreamBlock values always know how to render their own templates, even if you only have the plain value rather than the BoundBlock.
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